Image was taken with a Fujifilm X-E5 and XF 50mm f/2.0 WR lens
A few weeks ago I posted about An Oldie But Goodie – here
The camera I referenced in the link above was a Canon G-III QL 1.7. As soon as I sold that camera this one popped up on my radar. This is a Canon QL 1.9. The 1.7 had a 40mm f/1.7 lens and this camera has a 45mm 1.9 lens. Unlike the previous camera this shutter surprisingly worked (more about this later).
The light seals in this camera were deteriorated so that was my first project. While I was replacing the light seals I noticed some sort of film in between the rear lens elements so after I finished the light seals out came the spanner wrench to remove the rear lens group. Surprisingly I didn’t have to struggle with the tightness of this lens group and the job went quickly and more importantly smoothly. Now let’s get back to the shutter I mentioned earlier. The shutter would not fire when I purchased the camera but it was a $25 purchase so I wasn’t too disappointed. When I installed a new battery to see if the light meter worked I moved the aperture ring to “A” which placed the camera in shutter priority mode. I moved the film advance lever about one quarter of a stroke then pressed the shutter button and bingo the shutter fired. Obviously the battery must have died mid film advance when the previous owner last used it and it jammed the shutter. This baffled me a bit because this is a totally mechanical camera. Maybe one day I’ll try to figure out how a mechanical camera shutter can jam due to a dead button battery that powers the light meter.
The biggest job on this camera was cleaning and adjusting the rangefinder which took me about 90 minutes. To do this the top cover of the camera must be removed and a lot of finger crossing takes place because everything underneath the cover is brittle and fragile from age so my big sausage fingers had to be very careful. After cleaning the rangefinder glass a lot of tweaking took place on the horizontal and vertical adjustment screws to get the split image to align perfectly. After finishing this little gem I’m undecided whether I will run a roll of film through it. Only time will tell so stay tuned.

The caption is perfect!! I cant keep up … is this the one you were telling me was your project for the day (the other day)
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Thanks Laurie 😊 No this one is the 3rd Canon rangefinder camera I’ve brought back to life and tomorrow’s post will be about a Ricoh rangefinder camera I purchased off a lady that was in fairly bad shape. The camera I was working on when you texted me was a Nikkormat FTN which was Nikons entry into consumer level cameras (actually the Nikkormat FT was). You wouldn’t be able to tell it was their consumer level camera by looking at its internal components because IMO it was built just as solid as the Nikon F that I restored a while back. You are going to laugh but this morning I’m going out east to pick up another Nikkormat FTN to revive and I’m keeping my fingers crossed that the owner didn’t keep a button battery in the camera for the past 40 years to corrode and destroy the battery chamber. Wish me luck 🍀😊
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Your passion for restoring analog cameras is a fascinating hobby, sometimes frustrating, but at other times it’s wonderful to recover one of those fantastic gems. Sometimes, the hardest part is letting go of one that’s already been restored… 👍
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Thank you Charly 😊 I love recovering some of these old gems but you are also 100% correct it can be very frustrating at times.
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