Andreas Thaler
Subscriber
There are various motivations for picking up a screwdriver.
Which are yours?
Which are yours?
There are various motivations for picking up a screwdriver
Other than the reasons I have picked, I repair it because I believe it was once important to someone.
There was a time I followed the address inside the old case, went to Japan, successfully found the original owner (He was 89, just living a steers next to the old address). He was so excited to see his camera has (Konica Pearl ii ) returned. He told me that camera was lost on train and showed me the original box, receipt, old Konica warranty card and even the lost claim memo from police. The old man insisted his camera would return someday, since that has recorded many important photos of his family, especially his loved one.
May I ask you a question? If you were to repair camera for money, how much would you charge for CLA a Nikon F3 assuming no parts were needed. Basically you would have to disassemble the camera, clean it, lube it and adjust it to specs?
I think you would have to charge more than the camera is worth and because of that if I have a malfunction F3 I would either try to fix it, sell it, or do nothing about it.
I would pay someone who can do that!
It certainly depends on how well you are familiar with the F3 and how much time you need for a CLA. But a refurbished F3 is worth the investment as it is a high quality camera.
Since you're good at disassemble cameras so I ask you. In my opinion unless a no part CLA is more than $300 whoever did it really can't do a good job and make a living doing it.
I hold my own working on cars/motorcycles that are pre-1985 and can handle most mechanical, and some electrical, issues on vintage hi-fi equipment (tape machines, turntables, etc), and have repaired almost all of our home appliances at one time or another. And, of course, these days we have YouTube and the Web for assistance.
I do my projects purely privately. To calculate prices for a commercial service, you would have to find out your own costs and know the prices of your competitors.
I haven't dealt with that yet.
May I ask you a question? If you were to repair camera for money, how much would you charge for CLA a Nikon F3 assuming no parts were needed. Basically you would have to disassemble the camera, clean it, lube it and adjust it to specs?
I think you would have to charge more than the camera is worth and because of that if I have a malfunction F3 I would either try to fix it, sell it, or do nothing about it.
Sounds great!
Have you ever thought about doing this commercially?
I used to send them to a young lad who was learning repair but he has created a business of it now and doesn't need to be inundated with damaged cheap 80/90's film cameras.
Where did he learn?
There's a young repair guy who moved from London and set up a business in Birmingham about a year ago. He learnt camera repair because he couldn't afford equipment, so by picking up and repairing broken camera he had fun and ended up with working cameras. He was looking to get training with an experience repair shop when I spoke to him.
Ian
That's him, Ian. Pierro I think. He was on The Repair Shop on TV.
There's a young repair guy who moved from London and set up a business in Birmingham about a year ago. He learnt camera repair because he couldn't afford equipment, so by picking up and repairing broken camera he had fun and ended up with working cameras. He was looking to get training with an experience repair shop when I spoke to him.
Ian
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