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zorki 6 - shutter time measured |
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06-16-2012
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#1
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Registered User
brankop is offline
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 13
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zorki 6 - shutter time measured
Hi all,
I would like to share my measurement of shutter time for two Zorki 6 (1964)
B.
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06-16-2012
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#2
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Eugene Zaikonnikov
varjag is offline
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Bergen, Norway
Age: 35
Posts: 2,974
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Fairly consistent.
This confirms that the "new standard" 1/30 marking on the dial is still the old 1/25.
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06-16-2012
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#3
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Registered User
MartinP is offline
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 2,000
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Excellent test results.
Have they been cleaned and adjusted recently, or are they of 'unknown' servicing history?
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06-16-2012
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#4
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Registered User
brankop is offline
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 13
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The camera No. 640004230 was recently purchased on ebay so its history is unknown. The second one was not used for over 20 years. I recently started to use it without cleaning inside or adjusting.
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06-22-2012
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#5
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The Photographing Bard
Valkir1987 is offline
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: The Netherlands
Age: 25
Posts: 312
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Dear Brankop,
I would like to know wat device you used to measure the times and speeds. The table shows speeds in [ms] microseconds. Actually the curtains of both camera's run to slow, and their drums and shafts will need cleaning and lubrication.
Nothing confirms that the 1/30 on one camera is still the old 1/25. That could only be confirmed by measuring the distance of the slith with at 1/200 or 1/500.
This is just a matter of adjustment. Its the time where the second curtain closes when the first has reached the end of its travel.
__________________
- 4x Zorki 1 - 3x Zorki 4 - Zorki 4K- Zorki 11 - 3x Fed 1 - Fed 2 -Fed 3- Fed 5 - Kiev 4 - Zenit 3M - Zenit B/E/EM - Sokol Automat - Lubitel 2 - Cnopm (sport)Cinecamera
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06-23-2012
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#6
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Registered User
David Hughes is offline
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 2,296
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Hi,
Well, I don't want to sound rude, but I can't see that much can be drawn from measurements of this sort when we are talking about two second-hand cameras that must be about 50 years old and with an unknown history.
All I'd do with the measurements is decide if the things needed servicing or not. Their age and the lack of a FSH suggests it wouldn't do any harm if done by a camera technician.
Regards, David
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06-23-2012
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#7
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Registered User
wolves3012 is offline
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Wolverhampton, UK
Age: 56
Posts: 2,406
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To be honest, all the figures show is the shutters are running slow, particularly at faster speeds. If the cameras are unknown or un-serviced, this doesn't come as a shock. It's not uncommon for shutters to run a bit on the slow side anyway.
Since you have access to the timing equipment, I'd make use of it by servicing the cameras and adjusting them to be as near correct as possible.
__________________
Zorki: 1e (x2), 2C, 3M, 4, 4K, 5, 6
FED: NKVD, 1g, 2e, 3a, 3b, 4L (x2), 5B, 5C
Kiev 4, 4A
Leica IIIC
Yashica Minister III
Zenith C, Zenit C, Zenit E
Minolta XG M, Z1
Nikon P50
"The way to see by faith is to shut the eye of reason."- Benjamin Franklin
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06-23-2012
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#8
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Registered User
brankop is offline
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 13
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Hello all,
RE: used equipment
An IR diode + photo-transistor + high bandwidth oscilloscope.
RE: test
An missing information is that for each shutter speed, 10 experiment were done. A comment regarding the fast shutter speed: since the rising and falling edges of the photo-transistor output were not instantaneous, it is possible that the oscilloscope gave a bit biased measurement. I did not check what triggers the stopwatch: is it 10%, 50% or 90% amplitude of the observed signal. But then question is what would be the right amplitude.
RE: slow curtains
If you observe the first column, the shutter speed errors, relatively to dial numbers, are: +36.6%, +12.1%, 0.3%, -0.2% and 41.9%. To me, this implies that the error is not an linear function of the shutter speed. Can the curtains be adjusted for the each speed independently? Or one matches one shutter speed while other speed end up where they end up?
Best
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06-25-2012
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#9
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Registered User
wolves3012 is offline
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Wolverhampton, UK
Age: 56
Posts: 2,406
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Quote:
Originally Posted by brankop
Hello all,
RE: used equipment
An IR diode + photo-transistor + high bandwidth oscilloscope.
RE: test
An missing information is that for each shutter speed, 10 experiment were done. A comment regarding the fast shutter speed: since the rising and falling edges of the photo-transistor output were not instantaneous, it is possible that the oscilloscope gave a bit biased measurement. I did not check what triggers the stopwatch: is it 10%, 50% or 90% amplitude of the observed signal. But then question is what would be the right amplitude.
RE: slow curtains
If you observe the first column, the shutter speed errors, relatively to dial numbers, are: +36.6%, +12.1%, 0.3%, -0.2% and 41.9%. To me, this implies that the error is not an linear function of the shutter speed. Can the curtains be adjusted for the each speed independently? Or one matches one shutter speed while other speed end up where they end up?
Best
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Ok, so 10 measurements isn't statistically significant to be quoting SD really. Thirty is generally considered minimum for meaningful stats.
To answer the second part - no, you can't adjust speeds independently. Essentially, the only adjustment is the curtain tensions. Based on my experience, these shutters tend to run at the right speed provided the mechanisms are clean and properly lubricated. Of course "the right speed" means the speed determined by the slit-width, which is not readily adjustable. I don't mean "the exact speed marked". Messing with tensions doesn't have any major effect unless you go to extremes, at which point you won't have a consistent shutter. If you adjust the top speed to give a consistent and even exposure (no capping or tapering) then that's pretty much as good as you'll get.
In honesty, I would not obsess over the speed being exactly as marked. Provided it's reasonably close then film latitude will more than take care of things. Also, the exact film sensitivity, type, processing etc probably have errors greater than shutter speed does.
__________________
Zorki: 1e (x2), 2C, 3M, 4, 4K, 5, 6
FED: NKVD, 1g, 2e, 3a, 3b, 4L (x2), 5B, 5C
Kiev 4, 4A
Leica IIIC
Yashica Minister III
Zenith C, Zenit C, Zenit E
Minolta XG M, Z1
Nikon P50
"The way to see by faith is to shut the eye of reason."- Benjamin Franklin
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06-26-2012
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#10
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Registered User
brankop is offline
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 13
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Hello,
Thanks for your input. I am fine with exposure time being slightly off. I was just curious and I do not have plans to change it. For me it is fascinating that a mechanical device, almost a half a century old, still operates with millisecond precision.
RE: size of data sample used for calculating standard deviation
It is my understanding that all them are just an estimate. How many of samples one should use to calculate an estimate of the standard deviation depends of required confidence interval. Hence even if it is calculated from a data sample of 2 it is still called standard deviation (estimate). One should state the sample size so the confidence interval is known.
Best,
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06-27-2012
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#11
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Registered User
Ron (Netherlands) is offline
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 1,544
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Quote:
Originally Posted by brankop
Hello all,
RE: used equipment
An IR diode + photo-transistor + high bandwidth oscilloscope.
RE: test
An missing information is that for each shutter speed, 10 experiment were done. A comment regarding the fast shutter speed: since the rising and falling edges of the photo-transistor output were not instantaneous, it is possible that the oscilloscope gave a bit biased measurement. I did not check what triggers the stopwatch: is it 10%, 50% or 90% amplitude of the observed signal. But then question is what would be the right amplitude.
RE: slow curtains
If you observe the first column, the shutter speed errors, relatively to dial numbers, are: +36.6%, +12.1%, 0.3%, -0.2% and 41.9%. To me, this implies that the error is not an linear function of the shutter speed. Can the curtains be adjusted for the each speed independently? Or one matches one shutter speed while other speed end up where they end up?
Best
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professional shutter testers use at least three testing points to be able to get a decent measurement: one at the start, one at the end, and one in the middle of the curtain travel. You can't measure the shutters speed decently with only one diode or resistor....
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zorki 6 - shutter time measured (REDUX) |
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07-01-2012
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#12
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Registered User
brankop is offline
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 13
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zorki 6 - shutter time measured (REDUX)
Hello all,
Based on Ron's input, I remeasured Zorki 6 shutter time using three photo-transistors. Two transistors are located approximately 4 mm from the edge of the image plane. The third one is located at the center of the image plane.
Attached are results for 30 measurements for shutter speed 1/125. I also attached one sample wavefrom from the oscilloscope.
I did the experiment on both of the cameras and behavior is similar.
Best
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07-02-2012
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#13
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The Photographing Bard
Valkir1987 is offline
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: The Netherlands
Age: 25
Posts: 312
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Dear Brankop,
Thats a very nice stroboscope you have! Well, the curtains never run at a constant speed during the exposure. They will speed up towards the end, and for this reason the with of the slit between the curtains widens towards the end.
For this time I disagree with Ron, you can also adjust and test the speeds using one point. The middle.
Maybe you should check Isaak Maizenberg's book, there's and explanation on shutter times and how they are built up.
__________________
- 4x Zorki 1 - 3x Zorki 4 - Zorki 4K- Zorki 11 - 3x Fed 1 - Fed 2 -Fed 3- Fed 5 - Kiev 4 - Zenit 3M - Zenit B/E/EM - Sokol Automat - Lubitel 2 - Cnopm (sport)Cinecamera
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