Yashica 35 CC weird aperture

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blee1996

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Recently I bought two Yashica 35 CC, and both had this weird aperture blade problem.
Looking from the back of the lens (with backdoor open), the aperture has a weird shape
after stopping down. It is not round, but a irregular star shape (photos below).

I bought one from KEH and one from eBay, and both had the exactly same problem,
So I wonder if it is a common problem with this Yashica model.

If it is, is it possible to fix yourself? If not, who will be a recommended person to work
on these old Yashica compacts? Yashica Guy still around?

Yashica_aperture_weird Large.jpeg


Thank you!
 

xkaes

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You are jumping to conclusions. Not all apertures are shaped as you might imagine.

Do the pictures come out OK?

If it ain't broke.............
 

Kino

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Manual: https://www.cameramanuals.org/yashica_pdf/yashica_electro_35cc.pdf

Give old Butkus a couple of bucks when you download the manual; he deserves it...

"Exposure Control : Fully automatic exposure
setting through preselection of exposure symbol
(lens aperture) ;lC brain controls the electronic
shutter according to the light intensity measured
by the CdS sensor located directly over the lens "
 

reddesert

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Many compact cameras of the 70s and P+Ses of the 80s, especially those with electrically controlled exposure/apertures, used a small number of aperture blades, like 2-4 blades, often producing a somewhat star-shaped aperture (or cat-eye for the 2 blade types) at intermediate stops. I think some of them may even use the shutter blades to form the aperture, but don't hold me to that. Anyway, users, especially users of these entry-level cameras, were less obsessed with round aperture shape than they are now. They just wanted correct exposure.

I would guess that your camera has 4 blades and maybe is supposed to form a 4-pointed squarish star aperture and is a little out of adjustment, but I'd also be inclined not to mess with it unless you can establish that the exposure is off.
 

albada

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Your aperture has two blades, so that odd shape is normal.
It is not Abbie-normal.

Mark
 
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