Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1995/11/28
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Are we allowed to talk about Leitz enlargers here?... I've got a Focomat IIA; a huge ugly monster that goes up to 6x9, which is (not all that accurately) autofocus with a 50mm lens and has another autofocus cam for a 95mm lens (which I don't have, and making a cam for the 100mm lens I do have would be a real ordeal). I want to use it all the way up to 6x9; I have a rollfilm view camera. Problem is, I've got scratches on the negative carrier. The upper glass is a very complex part, as glass sheets go, with a ground flange: ________________________________ __________|_ _|__________ |___________________________| and the lower one isn't much better, with a chamfer held in place by angled rails: _____________________________ __________//_____________________________\\___________ -- -- Both are scratched. The top one is anti-Newton glass. I've tried to get a glazier to make me a replacement for the bottom one, but making it fit the rails requires submillimetric precision and they couldn't do it. They just looked at me funny when I asked if they could cut me a replacement for the top one. I've still got the originals; it might be possible to polish out the scratches in the top one, but the bottom one's had it. About all I can think of doing to save the carrier is tape a guide made from scrap film across the gate and use it glassless (not really a good idea for 6x9, and it would throw the focus way off). Any better ideas? Can I get replacement glasses or a replacement carrier from anywhere? There are other bits missing, too: no magnification scale (I don't need this) and some funny linkages under the baseboard which appear to be intended to link to the easel - auto-blade-movement or something? there's no mention in the instruction book of what this is for. But basically it works, once I got past the design misfeature of the whole shebang being way too heavy for the point where the column goes through the baseboard (this had worn a bit and needed to be shimmed) and the fact that it leaks light out of the lamphouse like a disco rig (fixed with tape and a chimney of black plastic drainpipe). Oh yes, the thread on the helical focus is soft brass and has worn a fair bit. All in all this doesn't seem to have been one of Leitz's more inspired designs, but 6x9 enlargers aren't easy to find. It doesn't have a filter drawer, but I can live with graded paper (someday I will figure out a way to filter it, like, attack that lamphouse with a hacksaw). Anyone else out there use one of these brutes? ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- jack@purr.demon.co.uk - Jack Campin, 2 Haddington Place, Edinburgh EH7 4AE