Showing posts with label Pentax H3v. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pentax H3v. Show all posts

Thursday, July 02, 2020

Field Trip

It has been months since I last took a walk around the UNM campus.  I went there yesterday morning with my Pentax H3v loaded with HP5+ which I shot at box speed and developed in L110b.  The lens on the H3v was a 35mm/3.5 Super Takumar that I've had for a long time but not used before.

Not unexpectedly, the campus was deserted except for some maintenance workers and a few people lounging around the duck pond.





There used to be a totem pole  from the Northwest in this courtyard behind the anthropology museum.  The pickup carcass seems a much more appropriate totem for the Southwest.





Near the main library I ran into a fellow carrying a digital camera with a long telephoto.  He was Mike Sandoval, a student in the UNM photography program and a photographer for the student newspaper, the Daily Lobo.  He said the Lobo is being published only on line at present.  We talked a bit about what re-opening the University might look like.  He said classes were scheduled to start up in August, but that the details were still very sketchy.

I gave some more thought to school re-openings as I continued my walk.  I think it likely that an effort will be made to get back to what existed before the pandemic.  It seems to me a better option might be to take advantage of the current situation to re-think the whole educational process (along with issues of over-population, public health, equitable resource allocation and environmental degradation!).  Suggestions are welcome.

Monday, February 13, 2017

Closeups

The wind blew all day Sunday, and a cold, gray sky kept me indoors for most of Monday.  I loaded some Fuji 200 color in the Pentax H3v and used the 1.8 SMC-Takumar to do some closeup work.




Monday, February 06, 2017

Dawn Camera

The H3v, known outside the U.S. as the SV, was the immediate precursor to the Pentax Spotmatic. It had all the basic features of that ground-breaking camera with the exception of a built-in, through-the-lens meter.


This one came to me with the very fine Super Takumar 1:1.4/50 lens.  Unfortunately, the camera also arrived with a shutter that intermittently would not fire.

I played with the camera's settings to try to understand the shutter problem and found that the shutter worked better with the aperture auto-stopdown feature turned off, and it seemed to work faultlessly with no lens mounted.  So, time to search the web for possible explanations.

After quite a bit of digging, I came across the likely answer at the Pentaxforums.com web site to the apparent shutter problem, which in reality was a compatibility issue.

"The SV came in an early and a late type. The latter has an orange 'R' on the rewind knob which tells that the camera can use the 50mm f/1.4 lens (which protudes farther into the camera than all other 50mm lenses)"


So, that green R designating the rewind knob is clearly pointing to the source of the difficulty.  That does not explain exactly, however, how the misfit lens was interfering with the action of the shutter.  My first idea was that the little flapper that activates the aperture stopdown was implicated in the problem.  On further thought, and considering the clicking sound of the misfiring shutter and the likely train of events in the process, I decided that it was likely the instant-return mirror hitting the lens that was stopping the normal shutter cycle.

With the lens off the camera, I brushed Ronsonol lighter fluid onto the mirror levers that were visible in the interior of the camera body.  Then, I mounted the slightly slower, but still very good 1:1.8/55 Super-Takumar from my old Spotmatic.  I worked my way through the full range of shutter settings many times without encountering any hesitation in the shutter's action.  The final test, of course, was to shoot a roll of film in the H3v.  I dropped in a roll of Kentmere 100 and took the camera on my usual walking route through Albuquerque's Old Town.  I only got a couple images I haven't shown here before, but I'm very happy to report that I came home with twenty-four perfectly exposed images.








The H3v story for me provides some interesting insights in several regards.  I think it points to the fact that Pentax and the Japanese camera industry at the time of the introduction of the H3v was undergoing a pace of discovery and technological development of a vertiginous nature.  The complexities were such that some compatibility issues were inevitable.  It also shows that Pentax and other Japanese companies were up to the challenge, and explains much of their long-time international dominance of the industry.

My own encounter with the H3v also provides some insight into my approach to camera restoration.  My tendency is to look for the simplest, non-destructive solutions to common problems encountered with the old cameras.  My objective is to get the equipment working well enough to make pictures reasonably close to what might have been expected when the cameras were near new.  I know that is a stance that will rankle with people who have more of an inclination toward mechanical expertise, but I'll happily admit that I'm a photographer first, and a camera repairman only as a last resort.  Of course, this approach only works in the short term.  If I need a camera to be ready to perform on a regular basis I think a better option is to seek the help of someone who has real skills.