The Rough Guide to Cleaning, Lubricating, and Adjusting the Sinar
Transcription
The Rough Guide to Cleaning, Lubricating, and Adjusting the Sinar
The Rough Guide to Cleaning, Lubricating, and Adjusting the Sinar Norma General Notes: • • • • • • • • The Sinar Norma has two kinds of screws: aluminum screws that thread into aluminum threads, and steel screws that thread into aluminum threads. Both configurations have a very limited ability to handle torque. So be very careful when tightening screws in your Norma. Use screwdrivers with small handles to keep the torque levels low. The Sinar Norma has several center detents. These are created by a spring, which presses a ball bearing into a machined slot. During a CLA on a Sinar Norma, some of these ball bearings will be able to suddenly jump free of the camera when the corresponding slot is moved out of the way during disassembly. I will warn you about this at the corresponding point in the process, but be forewarned that finding a 3.5mm ball bearing in a shag carpet (to use my own experience!) is a real drag, and a little care at the appropriate point in the process can go a long way towards making the CLA an enjoyable experience. If you are listening to music while working on your camera, turn the music off before you remove a part that exposes a center detent ball bearing. That way, if the bearing does fly away from your grasp, you have a chance of hearing where it lands and narrowing down your search! Top and Bottom are used to refer to parts based on how they would be placed if the camera was on a tripod with the standards leveled. Lightly grease means: apply a very thin layer of grease using a small brush. The layer of grease should be transparent. The Sinar Norma manual uses the elegant term "emulsion" to refer to the thickness of this layer of grease. If you apply too much, wipe away the excess with a lint-free cloth. What remains after lightly wiping with a cloth (or a nitrile-gloved finger) is probably the right amount of grease. Older Sinar Normas use screws to attach the fine focus and swing scales to the corresponding surface of the standard. Newer Normas use contact cement to hold these scales in place. I see no reason to remove these scales during the CLA, unless aligning the camera requires that you adjust the position of one of these scales. If you end up doing this and you have a newer Norma, then be sure to have some contact cement on hand to re-attach the swing or focus scales to the camera. For cleaning most parts of the camera, electronic parts cleaner is the best solvent to use. For more stubborn deposits of dried grease or the lacquer Sinar used for thread-locking, Acetone or nail polish remover is helpful, but be careful to keep Acetone away from the plastic parts of the camera. Also be aware that Acetone can dissolve the contact cement used to adhere the swing and fine focus scales on newer Normas. This guide does not currently address disassembly or re-assembly of: • The fine focus knob and locking collet • The lensboard holder and camera back holder mechanisms • The monorail sleeves Consider reading all the way through this guide before servicing your camera, so that you know what to expect during the process. • • Service one standard at a time on your camera. The pictures in this guide are intended to help you conceptualize how parts fit together, but having a second, assembled standard is even more helpful if you lose your way during re-assembly. This guide is a work-in-progress. Over time, I hope to add pictures showing every step of the process. Contact the author, [email protected] with any suggestions. Supplies You Will Need: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A small quantity of molybdenum disulfide grease (sold in multiple-lifetime quantities at auto parts stores) Silicone lubricant (sole at auto parts stores) A small paint brush (¼" wide or so) to apply the grease A toothbrush for cleaning camera parts Approximately 50 Q-tips for applying solvents or scrubbing hard-to-reach areas A box of wooden toothpicks for scraping or picking during cleaning and also for applying small amounts of grease A roll of paper towels (I favor the blue shop towels available at auto parts stores) Electronics Parts cleaner (comes in a spray bottle, sold at auto parts stores) Acetone or Nail Polish Remover A small quantity of clear nail polish A supply of compressed air can be helpful for drying parts you have just cleaned or for blasting debris free from camera parts A supply of nitrile gloves to prevent skin contact with the solvents and lubricants used in the CLA process. Hex wrenches (also known as Allen wrenches) in the following sizes • 2.0mm • 2.5mm Slotted precision screwdrivers in the following sizes • 1.4mm • 2.0mm • 2.4mm • 3.0mm • 4.0mm (something with a substantial handle so you can apply significant torque is ideal for this one) Two mirrors 3.5" by 4.5". Get a glass shop to drill a 3/8" hole through the center of one of the mirrors (or carefully do so yourself with a drill bit designed for glass.). A torpedo level Some adhesive tape, like double-sided carpet tape or gaffer's tape 600 grit wet/dry sandpaper Supplies You May Need (if you have an older Norma with the press-fit shift bar caps) • • • A small or medium weight hammer (something more petite than a framing hammer should work) A steel rod, 3/8" or ½" diameter, 4" long. PB Blaster or Liquid Wrench penetrating lubricant Acknowledgements John Wimberley is a master photographer, master printer, and photography education bodhisattva. As a longtime Sinar Norma owner, he is a wealth of information on this camera and was very generous with his time, answering many questions by email as I went through the process of learning to CLA my Sinar Norma. John also contributed several enhancements of his own to the first draft of this guide. Disclaimer I'm just a photographer, writer, and tinkerer. The contents of this guide are based on my experience with my Sinar Norma. I believe the information herein to be accurate and helpful, but I cannot be responsible for its actual use and application, or the results you may realize with your camera. Please contact me ([email protected]) if you have any suggestions for improving this guide. Cleaning and Lubricating the Sinar Norma 1. Remove the lensboard and camera back, set them aside. 2. Pick a standard and remove it from the monorail. 3. Remove the cap screws at the top of the standard risers, and slide the lensboard holder or camera back holder free of the standards and set it aside. 4. Replace the cap screws at the top of each standard riser. 5. Unscrew the tilt locking screw completely, and withdraw it from the standard. The standard risers will fall free. Clean these parts and set aside. Watch out for the thin metal washer on the knob end of the tilt locking screw. 6. Use Acetone or nail polish remover to dissolve any lacquer on the three slotted locking bar setscrews identified in the picture at right. Be careful not to get any of this solvent on plastic parts. 7. Partially unscrew the three slotted locking bar setscrews. Three full turns should be sufficient. 8. Extract the trapezoidal locking bar from the focusing track. Light pressure with a screwdriver tip should be sufficient to push it out of its place. Clean the trapezoidal bar and set aside. 9. Separate the top and bottom halves of the focusing track. After removing the trapezoidal locking bar, these two halves of the focusing track will just "fall apart." 10. Use electronic parts cleaner to clean the bottom part of the focusing track, and then set it aside. 11. Examine the caps at the end of the tilt bar. They will either be a pressfit, or secured in place with two 2.5mm Allen bolts. If they are secured with Allen bolts, remove the cap opposite the tilt locking knob by unscrewing the Allen bolts using a 2.5mm Allen wrench. (It's important to remove the cap opposite the tilt locking knob, because it makes reassembly of standard easier.) Clean the bolts, and set them aside and move to step 15 below. If these caps are a press fit, then complete steps 12 to 14 below. 12. Spray a penetrating lubricant on the following components of the shift bar and end cap: a. The locating pins b. The area where the end plate mates with the shift bar c. The hole where the tilt locking screw passes through the shift bar 13. Allow the penetrating lubricant to work for 15 or 30 minutes. 14. Use the steel rod and hammer to tap the shift bar end cap free of the shift bar. The steel rod should be lightly held against the end cap and tapped with a hammer. Move around the circumference of the end cap, tapping lightly until the end cap falls free of the shift bar. 15. Remove the shift bar spacer, clean it, and set it aside. Note whether this is a short or long spacer so that during reassembly you can properly position it. 16. Important Note: Under the shift bar is a ball bearing backed by a spring. This ball bearing engages a pocket in the shift bar to form the center detent action for the camera shift movement. While removing the topside focusing track assembly from the shift bar, this ball bearing will have a tendency to spring away from the camera and become lost in the most obscure part of your workspace. Wrapping a (paper or terrycloth) towel around the shift bar during removal from the topside focusing assembly traps this ball bearing after it is sprung free of the camera. If you lose this ball bearing, you can use any stainless steel 3.5mm ball bearing as a replacement (feel free to contact me ([email protected]) for this: I have the better part of a 250 pack of these things on hand for replacements), but if you exercise reasonable care you should not need to replace your detent ball bearings. 17. Wrap a towel around the shift bar assembly and slowly slide the topside focusing track assembly out of the shift bar. 18. After the shift bar is free of the topside focusing track assembly, look for the center detent ball bearing in the towel. Clean this bearing and set it aside. 19. Clean the shift bar and set it aside. Note: This picture depicts a shift bar with the WRONG end cap removed. Re-assembling this standard required three hands! 20. Five screws are used to secure the swing mechanism to the topside focusing track. Three of these screws are set screws, and two hold the swing mechanism to the topside focusing track. See the pictures at right for detail. 21. Remove the two large slotted set screws. Clean them and set aside. 22. Partially unscrew the 2mm Allen set screw. Two to three full revolutions should be sufficient. 23. Completely unscrew the two slotted screws that secure the swing mechanism to the topside focusing track. Clean them and set aside. 24. Slowly remove the swing mechanism. There may be some stiction holding it to its mating surface of the topside focusing track, so work it back and forth as you pull it free. Note that there is another center detent ball bearing between the swing mechanism and the topside focusing track mechanism, so be careful to not lose this ball bearing. The spring pressure on it is slowly released as you pull the swing mechanism free of the topside focusing tracking mechanism and it is likely coated in grease, so it is less likely to spring into an obscure corner of the room, but be careful anyway. 25. Clean and set aside the swing mechanism. 26. Partially unscrew the swing center detent adjustment Allen screws. Extract the swing center detent adjuster from its place in the topside focusing track mechanism. Clean this part and set aside. 27. Completely clean all surfaces of the topside focusing track mechanism. 28. Completely clean all surfaces of the shift mechanism. 29. Lightly grease the hole where the swing center detent adjuster resides. Replace the swing center detent adjuster in this hole. 30. Replace the spring and ball bearing in the center detent adjuster. 31. Lightly grease the top surface of the topside focusing track mechanism (the surface that mates with the swing mechanism) and the swing mechanism pivot. 32. Place the swing mechanism back on the topside focusing track. 33. Lightly grease the chamber in the swing mechanism where the retaining plate resides. Replace the retaining plate. 34. Lightly screw the swing retaining plate down using the two slotted screws. 35. Use the swing center detent adjusting screws to approximately center the swing center detent. 36. Adjust the slotted screws in the swing retaining plate to get the "correct" amount of pressure on the swing mechanism. This has to be done by feel, and it may take several iterations. I like to put the shift bar back in place atop the swing mechanism, and then test the feel of the swing mechanism in its locked and unlocked states. Then, if it needs adjustment, it is easy to slide the shift bar off, make a small adjustment to the slotted screws on the retaining plate, remount the shift bar, and test again. 37. After you are pleased with feel of the swing mechanism, replace and gently tighten the slotted set screws and the single Allen set screw. 38. Lightly grease the top side of the swing mechanism (the surface that mates with the shift bar). 39. Trial fit the shift bar back on its track. You will probably need to adjust the square shift bar retainer so that the locking mechanism works properly. If you've followed these instructions closely, you haven't touched the round shift bar retainer (except to clean it). But the square one is clamped down by the shift locking lever, and you'll need to experiment with how far to screw it down so that the shift bar can be slide back into place and so that the shift locking lever functions correctly. 40. Note: This step is a great time to be really relaxed, focused, and free of large amounts of caffeine in the system. I have nothing against caffeine, but it often causes small tremors in the hands, and the next step will probably go a lot smoother for you if your hands are steady. Slide the shift bar partially back in place. The shift center detent ball bearing needs to be held in place while the shift bar is slid over the hole where this ball bearing resides. Use a thin, flexible, but strong tool to hold enough pressure on the ball bearing so that the shift bar can slide over it. Ultimately, you want to slide the shift bar all the way back into place, trapping the ball bearing between the shift bar and the spring that holds the ball bearing against the shift bar. I have successfully used a small screwdriver blade, as well as the fingernail on my thumb, to hold the ball bearing in place while the shift bar is being replaced. Feel free to use whatever works, remembering that if pressure is suddenly removed from the ball bearing, it will launch into the workspace and may be difficult to locate. This is another good time to use a towel to cover the whole mechanism, as the ball bearing will want to spring away at the first opportunity. By the way, remember in step 11 how I specified which end cap to remove? That was so that this step goes easier. Two hands are enough to complete this step if you remove the correct end of the shift bar. If you remove the other end, you need three hands to complete this step! 41. Lightly grease the steel collar on the end cap (and the locating pins if it is a press-fit cap). Replace the shift bar end cap. 42. Lightly grease the threaded part of the tilt locking screw. Lightly grease 1" of the tilt locking screw rod adjacent to the knob. 43. Push the tilt locking screw through the right standard. 44. Push the tilt locking screw through the shift bar, replace the left standard, and then screw the whole assembly together. Note: If your standard uses the press-fit end caps for this shift car, you may have to screw the tilt lock down a little harder than usual the first time to get the end cap pressed back in place. 45. Remove the standard cap screws, replace the lensboard holder or camera back holder, and then replace the standard cap screws. 46. Lightly grease the surfaces of the bottomside focusing track mechanism. Re-join the topside and bottomside of the focusing mechanism and hold them together. 47. Lightly grease and insert the trapezoidal locking bar. Align the bar so it is flush with both ends of the focusing mechanism. 48. Carefully tighten the three locking bar setscrews. The feel of the focusing mechanism is based on how much these screws are tightened down, so adjust them until the focusing mechanism feels right. Remember that they are steel screws going into aluminum threads, so be careful. 49. Use clear fingernail polish to secure the three locking bar setscrews. Use a toothpick to place a tiny drop of fingernail polish on the head of each screw and the surrounding metal after the screw has been tightened to your satisfaction. 50. On each standard, there are four sliders that ride against the steel spine on the top of the monorail. These sliders are held in place with setscrews. See picture at right. Clamp down the standard you are working on. 51. One at a time, loosen a set screw for one of the four sliders. Work on 1 slider at a time to avoid the hassle of having to adjust the verticality of the standard relative to the monorail. Use a flat blade screwdriver that tightly fits the slot on the monorail slider. Place the screwdriver in the slider slot, tilt the screwdriver handle about 10 degrees, and then use it to gently pull the monorail slider out of its hole. 52. Examine the monorail slider. If it has been worn by the steel spine on top of the monorail, then do step 53. 53. Use 600 grit wet/dry sandpaper to grind down the end of the monorail slider opposite the slotted end. Place the sandpaper on a horizontal work surface, wet it, and hold the monorail slider vertically. Rub the slider against the sandpaper in a figure-8 pattern. Periodically check the end of the monorail slider and continue grinding it down until the surface is smooth and free of wear marks (it will have fine scratches from the sandpaper but that is OK). 54. Clean the monorail slider. Replace the monorail slider in its hole. Hold it in place with a slotted screwdriver while gently tightening the setscrew for that slider. Repeat steps 51 – 54 for each monorail slider. 55. Remove the coarse focus locking lever at the base of the standard (simply unscrew it completely from the captured nut). Clean and lightly grease the screw threads, and replace it in the standard. Note that you can adjust the "landing" position of the locking lever by adjusting the rotation of the captured nut. 56. The following steps apply to the lensboard or back holder. Remove the two screws at the top of the holder. 57. Remove the chrome retaining clip from the top of the standard. The sliding clips on the front and back of the holder will fall free. There are two 3mm ball bearings that can fall free at this point, so watch out for these. I have a large supply of these on hand, so feel free to contact me for replacements if you lose one of these. 58. Clean the retaining clip, the sliding clips, and the surface of the holder. 59. Lightly grease the surface of the holder, replace the components, and replace the screws at the top of the holder. 60. Repeat steps 2 - 59 for the other standard. 61. The monorail should also be cleaned with electronics cleaner, and lubricated by spraying it with a small quantity of silicone lubricant, and then wiping it clean with a paper towel. Adjusting the Sinar Norma The goal of this section is to help you get both standards of your Sinar Norma aligned with the monorail and aligned with each other. The most important outcome of this section is to have both standards perfectly parallel with each other. The second most important outcome is to have both standards square to the monorail. There are probably several useful approaches to aligning a view camera. This section presents one of those approaches, but I'm sure that other approaches can be used to get your camera aligned. 62. Remove the bellows from the camera, but leave an empty lensboard (a lensboard with the lens removed) and the camera back attached to the standards. 63. Mount the monorail, with rear and front standards mounted, on the most sturdy tripod/head combination you have. 64. Level the rear standard as accurately as you can, using the spirit levels on the rear standard topside focusing mechanism. 65. Loosen the tilt center detent ball bearing carrier locking screws on both sides of the standard using your 4mm flat blade screwdriver. 1 to 3 full revolutions should be enough loosening on these screws. 66. Adjust the tilt center detent ball bearing carrier on one side of the standard using a flat blade screw driver. Use the spirit levels on the camera back to get the rear standard 90 degrees to the monorail (both horizontal spirit levels should read the same). Note: The tilt center detent ball 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. bearing carrier will tend to creep out of the hole where it is positioned. While completing the next step, apply some pressure to the carrier to keep it flush with the surface of the hole where it resides. Lightly tighten down the tilt center detent locking screws on that side of the standard. Adjust the tilt center detent ball bearing holder on the other side of the standard using a flat blade screw driver. Use the spirit levels on the camera back to get the rear standard 90 degrees to the monorail (both horizontal spirit levels should read the same). Lightly tighten down the tilt center detent locking screws on that side of the standard. Verify that the standard finds the center detent crisply, and consistently aligns 90 degrees to the monorail. You may have to try several adjustments of the tilt center detent ball bearing holder to achieve this. Tighten the tilt center detent locking screws on both sides of the standard. (be careful not to tighten too much: these are steel screws in aluminum threads.) Tilt the monorail to a vertical orientation. Use a torpedo level to get it aligned vertically as accurately as you can. 73. Unscrew both swing center detent adjustment screws three full revolutions or so. Adjust the swing center detent using the adjustment screws so that the rear standard is as close to horizontal as possible (Use a torpedo level to measure this). 74. After the swing center detent is adjusted, make sure both swing center detent adjusting screws are tightened down enough, but not too much. 75. Return the monorail to a horizontal, leveled state. 76. Tape the mirror with the hole in it to the empty lensboard, with the hole centered in the lensboard cutout. Ensure the mirror is as flat against the lensboard as possible. 77. Insert the other mirror in the area where filmholders are placed. Be gentle so you don't crack the mirror. Center this mirror in the film aperture. 78. Look through the hole in the mirror that is mounted to the lensboard. Adjust the tilt center detent and swing center detent mechanisms so that the "trail" of reflected holes aligns upon itself and doesn't "trail off" to one side or the other. 79. Lock down the swing center detent and tilt center detent locking screws. 80. Test the tilt and swing center detents to ensure that they consistently lock in place with the front standard aligned to the rear. 81. Remove the mirrors. You're done!