What is the name for the tool I need?

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ggray79

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I am trying to disassemble this Olympus 35 RC to align the rangefinder but I am stuck trying to remove the timer lever. Is there a special name for the tool that I need so I can find and buy? Thanks!
Tool.jpg
 

Andreas Thaler

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I have this one:

 

Helios 1984

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I like to use either my Blue-Point PR-37 or PR-38 snap ring pliers w/ 90-degree tips. ---> here (not my picture)
I snagged a set for dirt cheap, at a flea market, a few years back.
 
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ggray79

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Looks like the lens spanner wrench is what I need. Thanks!
 

4season

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The exact tool was probably supplied by Olympus, and hasn’t been available for decades. But it can be replaced with home-made 3D printed tool or modified screwdriver bit. Alas, there seems to have been no standardized sizing, and if there was ever such a thing as a master set of such tools, I’ve never seen it.

IIRC, that specific screw may have left-handed threading.
 
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ggray79

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The exact tool was probably supplied by Olympus, and hasn’t been available for decades. But it can be replaced with home-made 3D printed tool or modified screwdriver bit. Alas, there seems to have been no standardized sizing, and if there was ever such a thing as a master set of such tools, I’ve never seen it.

IIRC, that specific screw may have left-handed threading.

Left handed would make sense now that you mention it because unscrewing counterclockwise is the same direction the lever itself moves.
 

Kino

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You can also take a cheap flat-head screw driver and file it to make two pins of the blade at the proper distance.

If the part protrudes enough, a screwdriver butt covered with grippy rubber can be pressed hard against the screw and turned.
 

drboone

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I asked the other day about a source of commercial face spanners for smaller size, and nobody had any.

I think you may find that the lens spanners only go down to a spacing of about 10mm, and some things (e.g. my example, the rangefinder adjustment cover on a C3) has narrower spacing than 10mm.
 

MTGseattle

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I have one of these and I've been reasonably happy with it.

 

Light Capture

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You can also take a cheap flat-head screw driver and file it to make two pins of the blade at the proper distance.

If the part protrudes enough, a screwdriver butt covered with grippy rubber can be pressed hard against the screw and turned.

+1

For this type of screws. I have a quantity of flat screwdrivers and flat bits to modify them in a shape that fits the original screw perfectly. Filing or grinding works depending on hardness of a screwdriver/bit.
 
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ggray79

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Left handed would make sense now that you mention it because unscrewing counterclockwise is the same direction the lever itself moves.

Long story short, I saw tech papers for this camera and it is left-handed!
 
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ggray79

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My wife, the wise, discovered online that the top doesn't have to come off for a rangefinder adjustment, so I no longer need to remove this screw! Good grief!
 

BrianShaw

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She may most likely be correct, but you still need to buy another tool. Buying another tool - just in case, or “for the next project - is a necessity!
 
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ggray79

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She may most likely be correct, but you still need to buy another tool. Buying another tool - just in case, or “for the next project - is a necessity!

From the Gospel according to Tim the Toolman Taylor! Thanks!
 

ags2mikon

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Those are called pin spanners. I made some out of wide short flat blade screwdrivers with a dremel grinder tool. Use the screwdrivers from Harbor Freight because the metal is softer and easier to grind and it may not mar the brass. :cool:
 

BobUK

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Long story short, I saw tech papers for this camera and it is left-handed!
If you look at the pin holes on the screws they are often severely scored by people forcing them against the left hand thread.

I have read in a couple of places that they are indeed left hand threads.


Some people blunt the tips of an old pair of engineers dividers, and so make a cheap adjustable tool.
 
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