guangong
Member
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2009
- Messages
- 3,589
- Format
- Medium Format
Dropping a brand new Rollei and getting lucky, is entirely different from manhandling a sixty year old camera with aging of materials and several decades of vibration and operation.
The case is probably going to be ok, if visibly good, but the mirror alignment, the shutter, the lens and other mechanics depends on the random temperament and intelligence of previous owners.
Should have noted that I bought camera used.
My study was destroyed by fire three years ago. Rollei survived fire, and after thorough professional cleaning to remove soot, back to normal, except that meter is o longer accurate.
I had a friend who assembled Rolleis in Germany. Years ago he tweaked my shutter mechanism, so that camera was even better than new.