Sorry, I missed that fact. You must have cited a reference, study, metallurgical paper, etc. Didn't see it. I did see you express an opinion (above). I'm not saying you are necessarily wrong. Simply that your opinion doesn't meet my own understanding of what the word "fact" means. It is an interesting topic. If you can provide some solid reference about cocked v uncocked I'd be grateful.
Cheers
Brett
Not only are the advertised to be stored cocked, they were designed to be stored cocked. I would rather trust knowledgeable people than take advise based on what someone had for breakfast.
I figured that I'd get some grief form that statement after I posted it. It's getting off topic, but it's been 3 page, and we've already wandered off topic on mirror per-release... but I'll try to be brief.
I am not going to provide any reference documents because I no longer have them, it was back in the paper days. You can do your own research.
From an engineering stand point, tensioned springs are under higher stress than untensioned. The Compur and Prontor springs are 4 turns, and they get tension over 270 deg. That is significant, and the strain is beyond the fatigue limit, which is why they eventually fail. Standard engineering practice is to leave springs untensioned, which makes them last longer.
Hasselblad and Zeiss introduce the upgraded Nivarox main spring to increase the lifetime on their CFi lenses. In an interview article (back then), they talked about the change, and the "engineer" mentioned that untenstioned springs last longer (which is standard engineering knowledge on springs that exceed the fatigue limit).
But as I said before, that does not mean you should keep your Hasselblad equipment untensioned. The product's "designed life time before service" was calculated in a tensioned state, which is why they used a quality spring. As Sirius said, they were "designed to be stored cocked". However, the product is likely to last longer than the "designed life before service" if you take some simple engineering care when stored. Some of that equipment is 50 year out, likely beyond the design life.
I will give an analogy - aluminium has no fatigue limit - Zero! That means it
will break if you cycle it under stress enough times. So how do all those aluminium stress structures survive? (Planes, bikes, car suspensions, etc...). The product is designed to survive X number of load cycles, which exceeds the number you expect for the life of the equipment. In other words, it lasts your/its lifetime. The Prontor main springs are designed to last X number of cycles - I don't have the # of cycles because Zeiss did not publish that (at least not when I looked, but its just like the shutter cycles quoted on SLRs, which are partly based on the calculated lifetime of their main spring). Strain (tension on the spring) and load cycles are well understood in materials engineering, so I prefer to store all my precision spring loaded equipment untensioned. That does not mean you have to. Because Hasselblad's design and quality (and service) on their V series was so good that a lot of the equipment is still functional.
PS: I had french toast for breakfast...