The mechanical linkages are only part of the problem in older cameras. The mirror is activated by a solenoid linked to the shutter. The chances are when the mirror is becoming lazy, so too is the shutter and by association,the shutter speeds. The old 6x7 bodies are very prone to age-related malaises with solenoids, the resistors governing shutter speeds, winding pawls and increasing frame spacing. A very tiny drop of light machine oil (not WD40, which is NOT a lubricant) could be tried but the lubricant must be very, very small as it can drip off into the mirror box. No other type of lubricant or displacement treatment is used or recommended in the Pentax 6x7 engineering manual. Where govenor solenoids are found to be faulty, it's easier now to replace the entire camera as service is very complex and precise and cannibalising parts from like cameras is not a guarantee of long-term useability.
Hi guys,
Thanks a lot for the inputs. I gave it a shot and dropped a tiny tiny amount of WD40 on the oxidized pivot points. As you said WD40 is probably not the recommended lubricant but quite effective at cleaning and loosing stuff. It worked as a charm, mirror flips up much quicker and consistently, these pivots were probably the main cause! great!
The amount of WD40 I put is really small (I just used a needle dipped in WD40). My plan is now to let it do its job for a while and maybe then put a tiny amount of machine oil for a more durable lubrication.
Thanks you very much again!
Franck
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