Helios 1984
Member
I've cleaned and adjusted the rangefinder of my Topcon 35-L.


Sorry to be slightly OOT, anybody knows where could I get small screw for Nikon top and bottom cover?
I opened my newly acquired Lanasix 3 to clean and re-glue the window which had come loose. The backplate is easy to remove after heating it for 15-20 seconds with a hairdryer and prying it off with a filed down flat screwdriver. I also very gently cleaned the silver filter on the photocell aperture plate and the glass protector. I have to say, I'm quite impressed by this little thrift store find, I knew it was working but I didn't expect it to be as accurate as my Luna Pro F.
Note: This one was manufactured during the 2nd quarter of 1973.
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Very nice. Is yours adapted to it can use modern batteries?
Was the production year somewhere written inside?
Great camera! I have one that is fully operational and one that is in a box awaiting my attention...Still a Work In Progress, but it's getting there
Aires IIIc, had 3 loose elements in the VF/RF, and the aperture ring was loose. Probably because the previous owner bounced it off the pavement at some point.
All fixed and calibrated now.
Still need to replace one broken pin on the back of the shutter and give it a good clean.
I see your camera has the PX diamond stamped on the shutter cocking lever. Some GI bought it in a PX originally.
Hmmm.
Work in progress on a Leica Standard body repair.
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That hadn't even registered with me. Sweet! Thanks.
View attachment 267062
It's back together now, I drilled out the broken pin on the back of the shutter and tapped in a custom replacement
The shutter mechanism itself took a good bath in the ultrasonic cleaner.
Only the aperture dial doesn't feel as smooth as I like it to be. I'll look into that sometime in the near future.
I might also touch up some of the engravings with a wax crayon.
Hey Rick, good to see you do the repair now yourself!
btw what was wrong with the camera (what needed to be repaired)?
and.. probably you know...but use epoxy with care - it isn't reversible - ...
The shutter wasn't smooth to wind and a bit sluggish on slower speeds and capping on 1/500th.
But in order to get at it I needed to remove the non-Leica leather covering. Then the filler came off with it, showing the hole in the body and a lot of pitting/oxidation.
I used the epoxy to cover the hole and build up a bit of the lost thickness.
Some screws were rusted/oxidized in place as well, that need some brain-surgery level of Dremel work to remove.
The weird dent isn't fully gone, but better than it was now.
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Just waiting on the replacement skin from Hugo Studio and I'm looking for some replacement screws to secure the edge of top cover to the body (I only had phillips heads in this size! D'oh!)
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I'll probably also replace the take-up spool with a contemporary Leica one.
haha, probably. I remember I purchased the keyboard, monitor, and computer for a grand sum of £1 from my school. I would've taken the dot matrix printer too, but my younger self could only walk so many miles back home with the computer/monitor/keyboard.They go so well with the keyboard in the background.
Similar vintage?![]()
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