Maybe John H can enlighten me (not "ignite" me, thankyou)....
I've always been told (and, thus, used) lighter fluid to clean oily
diaphram blades (and other things camera-related), then blow-drying
(carefully).
I see that you (John H) use "something else" (seems to be
compressed air with some antistatic stuff, no?). Anything I do
wrong/harmfully with the lighter-fluid, or can I continue this? (yes, I
apply graphite on the blades afterwards).
It's great to have "real" repairmen on the list to teach all us
amateurs. Thanks for all your advices ;)
--thomas
(who really wishes that John H would set up shop in Europe so he
wouldn't have to do such himself...)
On Thu, 24 Jan 2002, dreammoose wrote:
> OK, then where does the oil come from in the first place? Breakdown and
> migration of helicoid grease? As long as it's apart, should the grease
> be replaced? With what?
>
> Thanks,
> Moose
>
> John Hermanson wrote:
>
> >Use a good degreaser like freon if you can find it. I'm trying to protect
> >the environment so I stopped using it 10 years ago. I use "Blow Off" made
> >by AVW. try www.blowoff.com
> >After removing all the blades and moving parts and cleaning up all the areas
> >that are oily, you rebuild everything bone dry. You don't relube with
> >anything.
> >
> >>What does one use to clean oil off diaphram and shutter blades? More
> >>important, what is used to relube them that won't migrate out onto the
> >>leaves?
> >>
> >>Moose
> >>
>
>
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