Andreas Thaler
Subscriber
There is a problem with my old camera: Repair, shortcut, workshop or doing nothing?
Let me briefly go over the four options that can be used if an older camera/photo device has an issue.
I am referring to older devices that are no longer supported by the manufacturer.
- The correct approach is always to repair. This means fixing the problem directly and without detours, in a targeted and sustainable manner. To do this, you mostly need to open the device and dismantle it as far as necessary and then reassemble it later. There is always a risk of damaging something or doing something wrong.
- The alternative approach is the shortcut, which is to try to solve the problem from the outside without dismantling or only with little disassembly. The disadvantage of this is that you are working more or less without visibility. For example in the case of stiffness of the mechanism, you cannot place solvents/lubricants precisely in the right places. The bigger problem is oil, which can break free in excess and end up in places where it doesn't belong. It is therefore helpful to go through the process beforehand on an abandoned example that you have dismantled, also to see how the planned measures can affect the inside of the device.
- The third option is to take the device to a workshop for repair. To do this, however, you first have to find a workshop that will accept the device. And then you have to be prepared to bear the - usually considerable - costs without knowing in detail how the workshop went about the repair. This usually remains a trade secret. It is therefore unclear whether the problem has been solved permanently. So it remains a matter of trust, although recommendations from others and an open discussion with the workshop beforehand can help with the decision. Ideally, the device will be repaired according to the original factory standards, including using original spare parts.
- The last option is to do nothing and use the device with limited functionality if that is reasonably possible.
For a current example of case 2 see

Leica R3 ELECTRONIC: Stiff mirror mechanism repaired
I have a nice R3 here, in which the electronics are obviously still working properly (lucky!), but the mechanism in the mirror box seems to be resinified. The mirror only works as it should when I place the camera on the prism. Otherwise it will stop halfway I know from a training R3 that...

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