Andreas Thaler
Subscriber
Some time ago I sent the circuit diagram for the Nikon MD-4 Motor Drive to an electronics engineer who is particularly well-known in Germany.
I wanted to know whether a practitioner with a lot of experience who also develops circuits commercially could read the electronic function of the motor drive from it.
I was surprised that he couldn't.
He recognized some of the components, but how they all work together as a system was unclear to him. To be fair, I must note that he is not a photo technology specialist,
The IC in particular, that rectangle in the center of the circuit diagram, probably an undocumented Nikon product, makes the circuit a mystery.
I knew that, but it's still astonishing that even the grouping of known electronic components didn't help to understand the electronic processes in the motor drive.
Tribute to Larry Lyells
That's why the circuit descriptions in the manufacturers' repair manuals or the articles by Larry Lyells in The Camera Craftsman and SPT Journal are so important.
Only then can you get a more detailed insight into how the electronics of a photographic device work.
With the cameras of the 1980s
these descriptions became more complex or were no longer included in the repair manuals because the electronics were too highly integrated.
The repairman then no longer replaces individual transistors or diodes, but rather ICs that contain complex circuits.
Here, a detailed description no longer made sense, only the relevant IC, which is responsible for function X or Y, was replaced.
This is something you should know if you dare to repair a Minolta Dynax or Canon EOS.
It is not without reason that there are hardly any repair reports to this electronic cameras be found on the web.
I wanted to know whether a practitioner with a lot of experience who also develops circuits commercially could read the electronic function of the motor drive from it.
I was surprised that he couldn't.
He recognized some of the components, but how they all work together as a system was unclear to him. To be fair, I must note that he is not a photo technology specialist,
The IC in particular, that rectangle in the center of the circuit diagram, probably an undocumented Nikon product, makes the circuit a mystery.
I knew that, but it's still astonishing that even the grouping of known electronic components didn't help to understand the electronic processes in the motor drive.
Tribute to Larry Lyells
That's why the circuit descriptions in the manufacturers' repair manuals or the articles by Larry Lyells in The Camera Craftsman and SPT Journal are so important.
Only then can you get a more detailed insight into how the electronics of a photographic device work.
With the cameras of the 1980s
these descriptions became more complex or were no longer included in the repair manuals because the electronics were too highly integrated.
The repairman then no longer replaces individual transistors or diodes, but rather ICs that contain complex circuits.
Here, a detailed description no longer made sense, only the relevant IC, which is responsible for function X or Y, was replaced.
This is something you should know if you dare to repair a Minolta Dynax or Canon EOS.
It is not without reason that there are hardly any repair reports to this electronic cameras be found on the web.
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