David Lyga
Member
This has to be an exercise in frustration (and formulation of but new four letter words): Sometimes things go wrong at the wrong time. This has happened to me SEVERAL times.
You take the time to remove the top of a 35mm SLR, like a Spotmatic, or SR-T or other mechanical SLR, for the sole purpose of cleaning that prism area. (NB: if the specks are out of focus, somewhat blurred, most likely those specks are on the underside of the Fresnel and access is, instead, from the mount opening: use a very soft brush and DO NOT touch that foam or you will get a royal mess on the Fresnel screen.) But, back to the top area: You carefully brush all the top parts immediately after removing that top. You tighten the strap lugs. Then you remove the prism, clean the viewing area (both sides) then carefully brush away the dust that has accumulated on the glass/Fresnel area, even using a soft tissue with a drop of glass cleaner to get everything just right and immaculate. Then you do the same with the actual prism. Done.
You test your work by replacing that prism and looking through the viewing area to make certain that all is spotlessly clean. It is. You then begin the laborious task of replacing that top, putting back all screws and, in the interim, several times (at each successive stage of replacing the top), you confirm the cleanliness of that prism area through the viewfinder. All is finally secured, the top is on fully, all screws and knobs have been put back.
Then ... one final confirmation viewing and ... lo and behold! ... there is now a giant black speck in that viewfinder! The miscreant was hiding within the tiny crevices of the prism area and manifested only when the body was shaken for the tenth time. No way could that piece of debris have rendered its ugly face BEFORE that top was secured.
This, with one camera, happened THREE consecutive times. And, to FINALLY remove all debris, I had to spend a total of more than two hours and countless outpourings of utterly gross profanity.
Has anything similar happened to you? - David Lyga
You take the time to remove the top of a 35mm SLR, like a Spotmatic, or SR-T or other mechanical SLR, for the sole purpose of cleaning that prism area. (NB: if the specks are out of focus, somewhat blurred, most likely those specks are on the underside of the Fresnel and access is, instead, from the mount opening: use a very soft brush and DO NOT touch that foam or you will get a royal mess on the Fresnel screen.) But, back to the top area: You carefully brush all the top parts immediately after removing that top. You tighten the strap lugs. Then you remove the prism, clean the viewing area (both sides) then carefully brush away the dust that has accumulated on the glass/Fresnel area, even using a soft tissue with a drop of glass cleaner to get everything just right and immaculate. Then you do the same with the actual prism. Done.
You test your work by replacing that prism and looking through the viewing area to make certain that all is spotlessly clean. It is. You then begin the laborious task of replacing that top, putting back all screws and, in the interim, several times (at each successive stage of replacing the top), you confirm the cleanliness of that prism area through the viewfinder. All is finally secured, the top is on fully, all screws and knobs have been put back.
Then ... one final confirmation viewing and ... lo and behold! ... there is now a giant black speck in that viewfinder! The miscreant was hiding within the tiny crevices of the prism area and manifested only when the body was shaken for the tenth time. No way could that piece of debris have rendered its ugly face BEFORE that top was secured.
This, with one camera, happened THREE consecutive times. And, to FINALLY remove all debris, I had to spend a total of more than two hours and countless outpourings of utterly gross profanity.
Has anything similar happened to you? - David Lyga
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