A significant number of the original Stylus Zooms (35-70mm, black body)
develop light leaks around the back cover. The solution is to adhere a
strip of self-adhesive felt along the top edge of the back frame (above
where the back door closes) and a strip of foam along the bottom edge of the
back door outside the rubber seal. Corrects the problem 99.9+0f the time.
Actually, from my experience, it's alot easier to wait for a sunny day to
check for light leaks. I've fired a flash 100+ times from every angle at a
camera with film in it to check for a light leak only to have it come back
after only a few minutes in the sun. Things can happen as you twirl the
camera in sunlight with light constantly strking it that don't happen when a
flash fires 1/10k second....
Chuck Norcutt wrote:
> I have an OM-PC and a Stylus 35-70 zoom that have light leak problems.
> I think the PC needs new foam despite the fact that it looks OK and the
> same for the Stylus, I think it needs a new rubber door seal... also
> despite the fact that it looks OK.
>
> The question is, short of ruining a whole roll of film, is there some
> means to test whether the leak has been repaired? I don't have any
> developing tanks anymore but the only thing I've been able to think of
> is to insert a short strip of high speed B&W into the film gate and then
> let the camera soak in the sun for many hours. Is there a better way?
>
> Chuck Norcutt
> Woburn, Massachusetts, USA
>
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