frobozz
Subscriber
I've been shooting more and more Double-X in my F-1 New, and using those amazing little Shirley-Wellard reloadable cassettes...but I've been having issues. It was hard to get the cassettes in and out of the camera, and the film was tracking a little high across the shutter opening, meaning the tops of my images were into the perfs. After fiddling around with them a lot I finally realized the dead-simple fix: remove the little anti-backlash adjuster entirely. It's made out of really thin shim stock, but that puts just enough additional distance between the screw head and the cassette to make it a tight fit in the opening...and pushing it high in the opening. The anti-backlash feature isn't really required in this camera, nor is the tracking adjustment. Just spin out both screws, remove the anti-backlash shim, then replace both screws fully (to keep out any light.) Ahhhhhhh, now the cassette just drops right in like any normal 35mm film, and comes back out again easily, and no more perfs inside the image area.
Hang on to the anti-backlash piece in case you ever need to use your cassette in some other sort of camera that needs it, of course!
In case you have no idea what these are, here is another post from a while back where I linked to scans I made of the instructions, which will give you an idea of how they work:
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
Duncan
Hang on to the anti-backlash piece in case you ever need to use your cassette in some other sort of camera that needs it, of course!
In case you have no idea what these are, here is another post from a while back where I linked to scans I made of the instructions, which will give you an idea of how they work:
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
Duncan