Sticky focus ring- so I lubed it !greenspun.com : LUSENET : Leica Photography : One Thread |
I bought this new M 35mm f2 lens about 10 months ago. Used it on and off, lovely smooth feel. But lately I find the focussing ring "sticky". At certain parts of the revolution one has to turn harder. Looking at it focussing, I can see the brassy threads going in and out. Ever a DIY fella, I put a dab of Penn (a fishing reel brand) light grease on the brassy threads, gave it a few revolutions and the stickiness went away, problems seems solved .Will it come back to haunt me, oil in the lens, oil on the aperture rings, oil all over the body..........stop your hysterical laughter pls !
-- Yip (koklok@krdl.org.sg), January 18, 2002
Yip, Why didn't you use warranty service, did you buy grey market?I'd be worried about liquid lubricant volatility in a closed system such as a lens on body. Fishing reels are open to the atmosphere as we say in our industry. I think Leica uses solid lubricants. What do watchmakers use in their closed systems? Any watchmakers/repairers out there?
-- Chris Chen (chrischen@msn.com), January 18, 2002.
It is under warranty but I am not patient sometimes and take calculated risks. It is a light grease so I hope it would not end up everywhere. Only a tiny tiny dab......I am silly but not that silly ! The system isn't closed, air does get in an out of the lens as it is not waterproof. The only solid lubricant I know of is graphite, don't think I want to put pencil dust in my lens.
-- Yip (koklok@krdl.org.sg), January 18, 2002.
Since it is still under warranty I would send it in to have them undo your lube. If you pay a bomb for a leica lens why waste the money with a jury rig? I understand the time factor but maybe you can get a loaner from your local shop or even use another lens while waiting. Or learn to live with the focus drag. I used to think my noctilux had a rough focus turn and then I started to understand that there was a reason behind it and now I am glad I didn't screw with it.
-- Russell Brooks (russell@ebrooks.org), January 18, 2002.
I once read that watchmakers use a light oil refined from whale blubber. It is an oil, wherever it comes from. By now, they might be using something synthetic instead of natural! Maybe there's now a Castrol Syntec for watches . . .
-- Bob Fleischman (RFXMAIL@prodigy.net), January 18, 2002.
Oils used in watchmaking are almost all synthetic today, and extremely expensive... but you need very little. ;)
-- Jan Mattsson (janm@it-huset.se), January 18, 2002.
For those who missed my earlier post, I once bought a chrome 35mm Summicron in like-new condition, with very stiff focus. I suspect the lens had sat around unused. At any rate, I held it over our hot woodstove while I worked the focus for a bit. Worked like a charm, and the focus was butter-smooth forever after! I'll now divest myself of any responsibility for anyone else who tries this and fries their lens!
-- John Layton (john.layton@valley.net), January 19, 2002.