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Understanding electronic circuits in electromechanical SLRs: Both a challenge and a source of fascination

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Andreas Thaler

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Anyone interested in electromechanical SLRs cannot accept the prejudice that „the electronics“ are complicated, that there is little information available, and that they are impossible to understand anyway.

Unless, that is, you have a degree in electrical engineering and computer science, as well as professional experience in these fields.

What is the situation?

Yes, electronics are complicated. But that applies to any technology. The mechanics of an SLR are no simple matter either, especially when it comes to how they are designed and calculated.

Actually there is information available on SLR circuits. And not just a little.

General information can be found in sales brochures, manufacturers’ technical guides (e.g., for the Nikon F4, Canon T90, or Canon New F-1), and related literature.

More detailed information is available in SPT Journal, Camera Craftsman, and the C & C Electronic Troubleshooting Guides. This is presented from the perspective of a camera technician who identifies and fixes faults, and performs measurements and adjustments.

Detailed insights into integrated electronics—primarily application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) manufactured by or for the manufacturer—are, as far as I can tell, not available. They are subject to trade secrets.

You’ll have to figure all this out for yourself

But you don’t need an engineering degree to do so, although it certainly helps. Practical skills and a solid foundation in analog electronics and digital technology form the basis for getting up to speed on the subject.

SLR circuits are composed of basic building blocks that are interconnected to form systems. Starting as individual, discrete components and increasingly miniaturized and integrated into blocks (ICs).

Voltage, resistance, and current as physical quantities, as well as combinational logic (logic gates) and sequential logic (flip-flops, interconnected to form counters and registers; microprocessors, or multiplexing technology), represent these basic building blocks.

With this knowledge

you can gradually understand the structure and function of SLR circuits using the available documentation.

At the very least, one gains insight into whether a circuit is purely analog—i.e., controlled by voltages and currents—or digital, involving the conversion of analog values into binary values, or a combination of both.

A new feature is the ability to use AI to visualize these circuits based on prior knowledge. However, one should generally view what the AI conveys with skepticism, as it is not always clear how this information is derived.

In summary

understanding electronic circuits in SLRs is a challenge that requires initiative but offers fascinating insights into the design work of highly qualified engineering teams from the past.

And the more one understands the circuits, the better one can understand errors and the ways to fix them.
 
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It might also help to have some knowledge of serial bus systems and protocols (like I2L) and binary numeral systems (like Gray Code) since this is the way digital components communicate in certain, more advanced electro-mechanical cameras. Like the Canon A-1 and, maybe, its successors. The problem with this serial communication is that it is "volatile", often happening in just a couple of milliseconds and that it might be hard to extract the individual bits from the single wire.
 
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