Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/02/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]John: I just got an old dead gossen meter that uses a selenium cell. I took it apart and wiggled the selenium plate around and it made good contact and came back to life. It seems the selenium cells do not have wires soldered to them, but sit in a spring loaded carrier that presses some wire connections against it. From my experience, I assume this contact between the cell and the wires gets dirty and my moving the cell around in the holder cleaned the contacts. Your handling of you meter may have done the same thing. Regards, Robert At 04:56 PM 2/16/99 -0800, you wrote: >I was recently given an old British made Sangamo Western "Western Master V" >light meter complete with incident light cone. It was completely dead. It >had previously been stored at room temperature unused for almost 30 years. >Depressing the needle release button did not cause the needle to move off >zero. A photo repair lab told me that the light cell "was exhausted" and >that the meter should be junked. > >After sitting around with its new owener for six months at room temperature >the meter has come back to life. The meter readings are virtually identical >to those shown on my Lunasix 3. > >Are there any words of advice on whether this Western Master V needs to >visit another repair technician or whether it could be on its last gasp of >life before really becoming exhausted? > >jh > > > > >