Andreas Thaler
Subscriber
It is interesting that - as far as my experience so far - the complex and sophisticated electronic photo devices of the 1980s often suffer from surprisingly banal problems.
In the case of the Minolta 7000 AF
it is evidently a slight contamination of two contact surfaces of a switching magnet that disables the aperture control. And not a fault in the complex electromechanics.
It seems to be similar with the Minolta 9000 AF
here there, apart from a contaminated magnet, is also a piece of plastic in the shutter that is disintegrating, a misaligned mirror caused by the wear of a damping plastic pad in the mirror box and a blocked mechanism.
All of these are trivial errors in themselves, which sometimes become major problems because they require extensive disassembly work to fix.
The same applies to the Nikon F4
whose aperture control can be repaired with a small drop of oil, or to the Canon T90, whose magnets can also fail due to contamination.
In most cases, as far as can be seen, there are no electronic components or mechanical parts broken. Apart from leaking electrolytic capacitors and forgotten batteries.
The first mentioned electrolytic capacitors plague the
Minolta Autowinder G for the Minolta X cameras
and probably also the almost identical D version. Replacing the two leaking capacitors and the previously crazy winder works reliably again.
It is therefore worth continuing to research these impressive works of ingenious Japanese engineering and finding ways to make repairs easier.
Shortcuts in the spirit of Thomas Tomosy:
Thomas Tomosy, Camera Maintenance & Repair, Book 1, Buffalo: Amherst, 1999
In the case of the Minolta 7000 AF
it is evidently a slight contamination of two contact surfaces of a switching magnet that disables the aperture control. And not a fault in the complex electromechanics.
It seems to be similar with the Minolta 9000 AF
here there, apart from a contaminated magnet, is also a piece of plastic in the shutter that is disintegrating, a misaligned mirror caused by the wear of a damping plastic pad in the mirror box and a blocked mechanism.
All of these are trivial errors in themselves, which sometimes become major problems because they require extensive disassembly work to fix.
The same applies to the Nikon F4
whose aperture control can be repaired with a small drop of oil, or to the Canon T90, whose magnets can also fail due to contamination.
In most cases, as far as can be seen, there are no electronic components or mechanical parts broken. Apart from leaking electrolytic capacitors and forgotten batteries.
The first mentioned electrolytic capacitors plague the
Minolta Autowinder G for the Minolta X cameras
and probably also the almost identical D version. Replacing the two leaking capacitors and the previously crazy winder works reliably again.
It is therefore worth continuing to research these impressive works of ingenious Japanese engineering and finding ways to make repairs easier.
Shortcuts in the spirit of Thomas Tomosy:
Often you use a shortcut to avoid excessive disassembly, thereby reducing the risk of damaging the camera. The more work you do and the deeper you dig inside, the more chance you have of causing some damage. Keep the best repair method foremost in mind. Other considerations should come second.
Thomas Tomosy, Camera Maintenance & Repair, Book 1, Buffalo: Amherst, 1999
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