Latest and probably last tests.
A) Re-do basic test. Just for consistency. Hand-held. Distance to bulb 3.50m.
Top row: 50mm, bottom: 85mm. Left column 250 f:5.6, right: 125 f:5.6
B) Camera resting firmly on the tiled floor. The idea being that some internal part motion during the exposure sequence might cause the camera as whole to shake. Same layout as above. Results not better, not worse.
C) Sprocket wheel dis-engaged. By putting camera in "rewind" position. Testing (again, but differently) the hypothesis that the film advance mechanism might jolt the film. Proposed by MattKing, #36 above. Problem still there. Ideally I should have made several repeats of that, but: (a) the effect is still with us; (b) I was unsure how the film advance mechanism would behave after going back from "rewind" to "normal", possibly making a mess with zero usable pic;
D) Mechanical tests. Following previous post by Mark Overton.
Rear and middle elements: I could find no play.
The three screws securing the shutter (and optics?) to the focusing helicoid assembly. Difficult to access because no straight in-line clearance. One I tightened ever-so-slightly. All three showed shiny metal in the slot: had been visited before?
Then I tested the firmness of the focusing mount globally. Grabbing the front of the shutter/optics, it can rock back and forth
slightly. This slack is more pronounced in the vertical than in the horizontal direction. I have experienced comparable play in focusing mounts of some cameras without adverse effects.
Checked my other Contaflex (a Super B): the focusing mount has zero slack (even being a little too tight for comfort).
Conclusion: probably some play in the focusing helicoid, actuated as a collateral effect of whatever mechanism by which the main body tells the shutter to actuate. Even if the slack is more pronounced in the vertical direction, this seems to point at the cause in general terms at least. And an helicoid with some play is not repairable (at least not by me).
Unless the slack is located in the mechanical link between the base of the helicoid and the main body.
Brett Rogers, Mark Overton, Others: Is that easy to access, maybe under the front leatherette?
Lesson learned for future photo swaps. And again thanks to all posters who contributed their experience and thoughts.