The inaccuracy of fast speeds on mechanical cameras.

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Radost

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I finally purchased a 3 sensor shutter meter. My leica/Minolta CL were pretty much the same at fast shutters.
This is what i found on all 3:
1000 is 600
500 is 400
250 is 250
125 is 110

+- 5%
I have maybe 25 more mechanical cameras to check

Are mechanical cameras all slow over 250?

My 3 Minolta CLE were +-5%
 

BrianShaw

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Often that’s the case with the highest speed, for a wide variety of reasons. There’s plenty of speculation about causality, much of which seems plausible but unproven. But what are your expectations? Shutter speed accuracy is generally accepted to be plus/minus 1/3 stop.

With that knowledge you can now compensate with aperture so there’s little concern unless the speeds are not consistent. Or there’s the additional reality that there’s so much variability at each stage of the photographic process that as long as the negs are decent then all is well.
 

Paul Howell

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Given the years, state of lubricants, tension of springs it is not all that uncommon. My mechanical shutter cameras are all over the map, as much as 3 stops off. When I had a Nikon F and F2 I had them serviced once a year by Nikon and my Pentax Spotmatic maybe every other year to keep within tolerance of 1/2 stop.
 
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I finally purchased a 3 sensor shutter meter. My leica/Minolta CL were pretty much the same at fast shutters.
This is what i found on all 3:
1000 is 600
500 is 400
250 is 250
125 is 110

+- 5%
I have maybe 25 more mechanical cameras to check

Are mechanical cameras all slow over 250?

My 3 Minolta CLE were +-5%

How did you test? What is the accuracy of the test measurements? Shutters are easier to verify at a quarter of a second then they are at 1000th of a second.
 

Paul Howell

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Do the leaf shutters keep their high speeds better than focal plane?

A good question, one that I've read both yes and no, but when testing film and developer combos over the years my Kowa and Mamiya press lens seem to be very close to top speed of 1/500, within a stop.
 

Chan Tran

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Even electronically timed shutters are not very accurate at high speed. Low speeds they are significantly more accurate than pure mechanical shutter. You finding is typical not a surprise.
 

Chan Tran

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A good question, one that I've read both yes and no, but when testing film and developer combos over the years my Kowa and Mamiya press lens seem to be very close to top speed of 1/500, within a stop.

Within a stop which means 1/500 can be 1/1000 or 1/250?
 

loccdor

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I don't know if I've ever seen a speed go faster than it should, it's always slower.
 

F4U

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Do the leaf shutters keep their high speeds better than focal plane?

No. Iris shutter accuracy is TERRIBLE. No exceptions, unless it's brand spanking new. the deal with iris shutters is to get a shutter tester, find out the most accurate speeds, which will be 1 or 2, and use them.
 

BrianShaw

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No. Iris shutter accuracy is TERRIBLE. No exceptions, unless it's brand spanking new. the deal with iris shutters is to get a shutter tester, find out the most accurate speeds, which will be 1 or 2, and use them.

Assuming that the leaf shutter is in good mechanical condition and properly serviced, they actually can be quite accurate… well within the acceptable specification deviations. What makes some folks think they are not accurate seems to often be a lack of understanding about shutter efficiency. That variability is simply a fact of life and should be understood, especially when testing shutter speed and using flash bulbs as it does impose a significant effect. The other reason is unrealistic expectations of shutter speed accuracy.
 

Paul Howell

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Within a stop which means 1/500 can be 1/1000 or 1/250?
Maybe 20 years ago I had my Mamiya press 100 3.5 serviced by Phoenix Camera Repair (no longer in business) it was a full stop fast, so 1/1000 of second which seemed to be unlikely to me, I only know of few fast leaf shutters, the Kodak 1/800 in the Tourist and the Graphic lens for the super at 1/1000. The Mamiya underexposed by a stop. Once it was serviced it was spot on. My Yahsica D seems to be a stop slow, the Kowas might be a bit slow as they tend to overexpose a bit and I shoot at higher ISO than I do with electonic shutters.
 

xkaes

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Those higher speeds are harder to achieve on mechanical focal plane shutter cameras. That's why just about every camera company -- back in the mechanical SLR heydays -- offered a top-end camera with 1/1,000 top speed, as well as a less expensive brother with a top speed of only 1/500. For example, that was the case with Minolta's first SLRs in the 1950s -- the SR-2 (1/1,000) and the SR-1 (1/500), and well as their 1970's SLRs -- the SRT102 (1/1,000) and the SRT100 (1/500). It was the same with the Pentax Spotmatic SP1000 vs SP500, the Mamiya MSX 1000 vs MSX 500. The list goes on.
 
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MattKing

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No. Iris shutter accuracy is TERRIBLE. No exceptions, unless it's brand spanking new. the deal with iris shutters is to get a shutter tester, find out the most accurate speeds, which will be 1 or 2, and use them.

This doesn't match the experience of my camera repair friend - who has decades of professional level experience.
He tested a bunch of such shutters on a bunch of different cameras for us at my Darkroom Group, and many of them were leaf shutters.
The fastest speeds were usually a bit slow - 1/2 a stop at the outside, but many of them were within a 1/3 of a stop for most speeds.
And those cameras and shutters were of all sorts, as well as a lot of different vintages, and a lot of different exposure to regular maintenance.
This includes the shutter in my Zeiss Ikon whose lens was manufactured in 1939.
One thing to be aware of though - some shutter testers are better set up for testing focal plane shutters.
 

loccdor

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From exposing slide or thin-latitude negative film:

My Kiev-4 mechanical focal plane shutter seems uniformly about 1/2 stop slow on all high speeds
Autocord and Olympus Pen D leaf shutters (newly serviced) are good, maybe 1/3 stop slow at the most
My Olympus XA2 is 2/3 stop fast but that's an internal light meter thing (electronic leaf?)
The Canon T90 (serviced professionally) and Canon EOS Elan 7E (cleaned shutter blades with alcohol) are very accurate even to 1/4000 (electronic focal plane)
 

Les Sarile

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I finally purchased a 3 sensor shutter meter. My leica/Minolta CL were pretty much the same at fast shutters.
This is what i found on all 3:
1000 is 600
500 is 400
250 is 250
125 is 110

+- 5%
I have maybe 25 more mechanical cameras to check

Are mechanical cameras all slow over 250?

My 3 Minolta CLE were +-5%

Your CL has a horizontal shutter doesn't it?

A new Nikon FM2 reviewed by Pop Photo 12-1982 shows the Nikon FM2 they tested looks better above 1/125 all the way to 1/4000 then in the low speeds. I wonder how consistent these performance tests are across more than 1 sample?

PP1982-12 by Les DMess, on Flickr
 
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