I recently did a bit of a disassembly, cleaning, and lubrication of this lens that came with my Retina IIIS and now need to calibrate the focus to the rangefinder on the IIIS. I'll be using a split prism focusing screen scavenged from a non functioning Minolta X300. From what I understand, the basic process is:
1. Put the camera on a tripod facing something far away with the back open and set to bulb.
2. Tape or hold the focusing screen on the film plane.
3. Hold the shutter open (I might use a shutter cable that has a lock)
4. With the lens set to infinity, use a loupe to check precise focus at the screen and adjust how the helical sits in the camera body as needed.
My general question is, am I missing something or are there things to especially watch out for?
Most sources seem to say something along the lines of focus on "something as far away as possible." In the real world does this mean find a place that I can focus on something a mile away or would choosing a light pole 150 meters out my window be plenty?
Also, there seems to be a slight rattle I can't get rid of between the two main parts of the lens body. The link between them is the one with the large teflon washer and the two brass curved retaining pieces. Even with adjusting the brass pieces pushed as far out from the center point there is still the slightest movement. It rotates smoothly and I'm guessing it won't effect functionality but just curious if I should try adjusting it again.
Thanks for any info!
1. Put the camera on a tripod facing something far away with the back open and set to bulb.
2. Tape or hold the focusing screen on the film plane.
3. Hold the shutter open (I might use a shutter cable that has a lock)
4. With the lens set to infinity, use a loupe to check precise focus at the screen and adjust how the helical sits in the camera body as needed.
My general question is, am I missing something or are there things to especially watch out for?
Most sources seem to say something along the lines of focus on "something as far away as possible." In the real world does this mean find a place that I can focus on something a mile away or would choosing a light pole 150 meters out my window be plenty?
Also, there seems to be a slight rattle I can't get rid of between the two main parts of the lens body. The link between them is the one with the large teflon washer and the two brass curved retaining pieces. Even with adjusting the brass pieces pushed as far out from the center point there is still the slightest movement. It rotates smoothly and I'm guessing it won't effect functionality but just curious if I should try adjusting it again.
Thanks for any info!