   
Brian Wallen
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | Posted on Monday, May 03, 2004 - 02:32 pm: |
|
I have a reasonable amount of experience with camera restoration, but shutter mechanics terrify me. I have two Synchro Compur shutters with the same problem, one self-induced: the cocking mechanism hangs. I actually triggered the problem in the second shutter, by examining it to try to fix the first one. I moved a lever to the right and cannot move it back to its original position--the same condition I noted in the first shutter. I suspect this is a simple problem of a lockout that can be reset, but I don't have much of a clue about which feature of the shutter has been enabled, though intuition suggests the self-time mechanism. Can someone with an understanding of Compurs help? There are pictures of the mechanism and the suspect part at: http://www.staff.uiuc.edu/~b-wallen/Systems/Trouble/Compur1.htm |