I bought a non working Electro 35 GS a year or so back and I managed to replace the pad of death without removing the leatherette. It was a bit fiddly, but with the top off, I was able to get into the pad area with a pair of tweezers, clean off the old pad and fit a new one.
On the current exchange rate £18 is ~$34 Australian. There is one of those Brownie Reflex cameras for sale not far from me for $50 and it is in way worse condition than the one you pulled out of the box. I reckon your £18 was pretty well spent, overall.
I would be interested to learn more about the thing you mention regarding vintage flashes and new camera. I assume the electronics generate very high voltages and this high voltage probably do no good to the hot shoe of a modern one, but I don't know the details
Hi, I'd defo love to hear about using old flashes on modern bodies. I have a ton of them but I'm scared to put one on my Fujifilm X-T5 in case I fry it.
I bought a Yashica GTN (and the battery adapter) with POD problems. Took it to a reputable service centre who told me the cost of the repair would be worth more than the camera. Told them to use it for parts. They didn't charge me for the examination and scrapped it. I also found that the diamond shaped focusing patch in the viewfinder was too small and unclear (for me as a glasses wearer). Just because Spiderman used one doesn't make them any good.
My photography class at school used the Kodak instamatic cameras they were good basic cameras back in their time and I am surprised that they still exist as collectors pieces because once they stopped working most people just threw them away because of their age and condition
Hi Gideon, unlucky this time although I'd leave the batteries in the Electro as it may come back to life eventually once the capacitors re-charge. Bargains still out there, last Sunday at a car boot sale picked up a 1962 Canon FP body only for £5.
In a charity shop, I found a corroded FinePix s7000, for a fiver (cleaned works fine) the following week found a new in box, never used Hanimex TS/855 for £7 with all the filters and everything. Back in the day I used om10/20s and used flash to "stop" action/
Unlucky with the main item. It is a camera that I have seen listed often and been put off bidding as the prices have got stupid. Thanks for the heads up about the common problem that I wasn't aware of, so I will be cautious about that model. Keith
I’ve had 7 electro 35s in various guises over the years. Not a single one has ever worked fully. One was sold as working, but the shutter was sluggish, and thanks to the badly manufactured thread inside the lens barrel, I couldn’t get the front element out. Frankly, I don’t rate the build quality of the electro 35 at all, which given that the fx-2 and the fx-d were such great cameras, it’s hard to believe they were from the same manufacturer
Not surprised at all, I've now picked up a Lynx 5000E and the difference is night and day. The Lynx is smaller, better built, has a different shutter mechanism (with no Pad of Death), is fully mechanical, and is fully manual. Yet the sell for far less than the Electros!
@@gideonliddiardphotography Makes sense. A mate of mine has a Lynx 14 which he loves. The electros should in theory be superior, but they are just not reliable enough after such a long time, and they're a pain to work on if you need to dismantle the lens. The prices for them in working condition are still quite silly as well, but that's Spiderman's fault entirely :) I'm definitely not on ebay no looking at Lynx 5000E's.... not at all.... not even a little bit.....
I've been looking for a focus finder like that forever. I have the microscope style one and it's bloody impossible for me to see through. I'd have been happy just with that for 18 quid!
@@gideonliddiardphotography it is not, they look very different (compare with say, a patterson grain focuser), its a slide viewer (compare to the various KAISER offerings)
the first one is for focusing using the enlarger you put it ontop of the paper and look through it for grain
I think it's a 35mm slide viewer for use on a Light Table
I bought a non working Electro 35 GS a year or so back and I managed to replace the pad of death without removing the leatherette. It was a bit fiddly, but with the top off, I was able to get into the pad area with a pair of tweezers, clean off the old pad and fit a new one.
My first 35mm was a Halina 160 it had a little switch to select the ISO. All it did was change the apperture.
On the current exchange rate £18 is ~$34 Australian. There is one of those Brownie Reflex cameras for sale not far from me for $50 and it is in way worse condition than the one you pulled out of the box. I reckon your £18 was pretty well spent, overall.
I would be interested to learn more about the thing you mention regarding vintage flashes and new camera. I assume the electronics generate very high voltages and this high voltage probably do no good to the hot shoe of a modern one, but I don't know the details
Hi, I'd defo love to hear about using old flashes on modern bodies. I have a ton of them but I'm scared to put one on my Fujifilm X-T5 in case I fry it.
I collect and so I’ll be interested to see what you got in other lots and maybe pick up some tips
First one is a slide viewer, I have one too.
#1 is a slide viewer
I bought a Yashica GTN (and the battery adapter) with POD problems. Took it to a reputable service centre who told me the cost of the repair would be worth more than the camera. Told them to use it for parts. They didn't charge me for the examination and scrapped it. I also found that the diamond shaped focusing patch in the viewfinder was too small and unclear (for me as a glasses wearer). Just because Spiderman used one doesn't make them any good.
Hi, I'm new to your channel. May I ask where you source your job lots, please? Thank you.
I've got them all from eBay, and welcome to the channel
My photography class at school used the Kodak instamatic cameras they were good basic cameras back in their time and I am surprised that they still exist as collectors pieces because once they stopped working most people just threw them away because of their age and condition
Hi Gideon, unlucky this time although I'd leave the batteries in the Electro as it may come back to life eventually once the capacitors re-charge. Bargains still out there, last Sunday at a car boot sale picked up a 1962 Canon FP body only for £5.
Yeah a flash tutorial would be cool
Cool - I will add it to the list
In a charity shop, I found a corroded FinePix s7000, for a fiver (cleaned works fine) the following week found a new in box, never used Hanimex TS/855 for £7 with all the filters and everything. Back in the day I used om10/20s and used flash to "stop" action/
@@johnh10000 Nice finds
Unlucky with the main item. It is a camera that I have seen listed often and been put off bidding as the prices have got stupid. Thanks for the heads up about the common problem that I wasn't aware of, so I will be cautious about that model. Keith
I’ve had 7 electro 35s in various guises over the years. Not a single one has ever worked fully. One was sold as working, but the shutter was sluggish, and thanks to the badly manufactured thread inside the lens barrel, I couldn’t get the front element out. Frankly, I don’t rate the build quality of the electro 35 at all, which given that the fx-2 and the fx-d were such great cameras, it’s hard to believe they were from the same manufacturer
Not surprised at all, I've now picked up a Lynx 5000E and the difference is night and day. The Lynx is smaller, better built, has a different shutter mechanism (with no Pad of Death), is fully mechanical, and is fully manual. Yet the sell for far less than the Electros!
@@gideonliddiardphotography Makes sense. A mate of mine has a Lynx 14 which he loves. The electros should in theory be superior, but they are just not reliable enough after such a long time, and they're a pain to work on if you need to dismantle the lens.
The prices for them in working condition are still quite silly as well, but that's Spiderman's fault entirely :)
I'm definitely not on ebay no looking at Lynx 5000E's.... not at all.... not even a little bit.....
Interesting - on the plus side an empty 620 spool ready for loading with 120 film!
I've been looking for a focus finder like that forever. I have the microscope style one and it's bloody impossible for me to see through. I'd have been happy just with that for 18 quid!
I'm sure he'll sell it to you when he sees your comment 😉
is the first item a simple daylight slide viewer?
looks like a slide viewer
Looks like a slide viewer
What is a bat tree?
A tree that bats roost in. 🦇 🌳
Off subject SRV fan?
I am indeed :-)
Slide viewer?
Nothing Ventured as they say.
Indeed, but I'm giving up on Electro 35's, the Yashica Lynx looks like a much safer bet.
The first thing you pulled out is a focus finder for the darkroom.
Had a feeling it was, thanks for confirming
@@gideonliddiardphotography it is not, they look very different (compare with say, a patterson grain focuser), its a slide viewer (compare to the various KAISER offerings)
Slide viewer