Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/06/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Here is a message from the archives: > The three screws are almost exactly as you described. The third screw with > the eccentric behind the rangefinder's arm limits the "inward" travel of the > rangefinder arm and the thin "flap" off the rangefinder pivot that contacts > this same third adjustment limits the "outward" travel. So we can limit the > rangefinder's movement, not something that we need lose sleep over, and we > can also adjust the roller's vertical position by bending the arm. These > adjustments are factory set and only need readjusting after catastrophic > events such as we have nightmares about. Let us disregard them. The roller > is indeed on a eccentric screw and it does the fine adjustment of the > rangefinder's arm rotational position. The rangefinder arm is attached to > the rangefinder mechanism at the pivot end by yet another eccentric. This > one has a lock screw and the eccentric is adjusted by moving the slotted > tab. This adjusts the range of rotation a given lens cam movement will > impart by changing the length of the arm. A shorter arm gives more rotation > and a longer arm gives less rotation. One checks the rangefinder at > infinity, at 10 meters and at 1 meter. One has to adjust the length of the > arm so that when the roller eccentric adjustment is done to give correct > indication at infinity, the other two are correct as well. It is a Zen > thing. The factory and distributors do not use lenses to do this but a > special jig with a mount for the camera and a target with all the various > marks so you can do the above adjustments and more. The rangefinder arm is > worked with a special tool that mounts on the lens bayonets and has stops > for each of the three measuring points. Cool. The more I learn about this > the more inclined I am to leave it alone ;-). One could easily rig up > targets at fixed distances but one would have to use a ground glass to > compare focus between the rangefinder and the film plane. I hope this has > helped to clear things up somewhat. After a good solid whack, it is not > unusual for the infinity indication to be off. Commonly people then reset > the roller position to correct things. I do not know what actually gets > shifted but it is reasonable to assume that range of rotational movement > does not need to be changed, so we do not have to adjust the length of the > arm, but that the infinity just needs to be reset by adjusting the roller. A > very long winded reply to say: Yes, tweak the roller eccentric for minor in > service adjustments. >> From: "Craig Roberts" <croberts@zoomtel.com> >> >> Back when I owned an M4 it seems I was required to make rangefinder >> alignment adjustments fairly frequently. I have since read that the M4 was >> purposely built that way, the argument being that the proliferation of Leica >> dealers and repair persons back then made periodic...annual, for >> instance..."tweaking" feasible. >> >> At any rate, many years ago my local Leica dealer / repairman taught me how >> to adjust the rangefinder coincidence at infinity...but I don't remember the >> procedure. I'd like to do the same with my M3 since it's slightly out of >> whack (the rangefinder travels past infinity very slightly), but don't wish >> to make matters worse by "fiddling". For that matter, I might be >> overreacting. The misalignment at infinity may be so small as to make >> focusing errors imperceptible anyway (I've never had any experience with the >> incredibly large and precise M3 viewfinder image). >> >> Any advice? >> >> If rangefinder alignment on the older M-series cameras is user-friendly, how >> is it done? >>