Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/05/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I was at a local Leica demo and clinic day several years ago and was waiting in line to have my rangefinder checked. The chap in front of me had a minty M3 and Gerry Smith (Leica Repair God) just about had a heart attack when he heard the camera fire. Gerry would not even let the chap wind the camera on and insisted he send it for a CLA right away! My older and more battered M2 he did not even hook up to the shutter tester as it sounded great. What Gerry did not know, but could tell, was that the M2 was only three years off its last CLA. All petroleum and animal based lubricants lose efficacy over time due to settling, evaporation and separation. The base materials may remain in place but that does not lubricate and actually gums up the works. Leica cameras are practically a engineering text book on the use of self-lubricating material combinations and require very little lubricant. My personal inexpert opinion is that with regular use, which keeps the lubricants mixed and properly distributed, every ten to fifteen years would be a good idea. You have to do it more often if the camera is seldom used as the lubricants settle and separate. You also have to CLA more often in dusty environments naturally. Curiously, in the newer cameras, winterising is no longer needed. I have a test of a M6 frozen to -20šC (not just exposed) and the shutter was still within 4% percent accuracy! Two particular lubricant problem areas on the M cameras are the gear trains for the slow speeds and self-timer. Just run them through their paces every month or so and every thing should be OK. Remember that it is not just whether a camera is working but also how well critical mechanical points are protected from wear. I could go on but I did just recently take a vow of silence ;-) John Collier > From: Bill Satterfield <cwsat@cyberhighway.net> > > What is the consensus on when and by whom should this be done. If > camera is working OK, although old, say anythig before the M6, is it > advisable to do it for maitenance? >