DIY: TTL metered prism for Pentacon Six – Part 1

I have two TTL meter prisms for Pentacon Six. They are nicely built and generally accurate – with the body, it looks simply much nicer than the waist-level finder or the non-metered prism. However, one of my prism has its eyepiece shutter lever stuck at “closed” position. I decide to take it apart…

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First, take off the top screw of the meter dial using a tweezer or two mirco screwdrivers. Beware not to scratch the screw.

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Then, take off the ASA/DIN plate, and the small washer beneath it. Optional: the eyepiece can be taken off by unscrewing the two tiny screws located at the underside of the eyepiece oriented in V-shape. You can see that the eyepiece shutter (the piece of plastic with diagonal white/blue strips) is at “closed” position. If you have a stuck shutter like I do, fiddle around with it and see if it fixes the problem.

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Using a tweezer, take off the big washer.

Note that there’s a little hook on the washer that keeps the ASA/DIN plate rotating in unison with shutter speed ring, unless you disengage it by pulling the ring up – that’s exactly what you do when you change the ASA/ISO/DIN setting!

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Next take off the shutter speed ring by unscrewing the three concentric screws. Afterwards, you should see a big dial as pictured above. Rotate it such that two screws at 3 and 9 o’clock positions are exposed. Unscrew them.

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Take off the aperture / stop-down metering selection ring, and the cardboard-made washer underneath as well.

There are two film-like washers underneath the big dial that tend to wobble (but shouldn’t come off easily).  Keep them in mind when you put everything back together – I fix their positions by putting needles through the screw mounts.

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Next, take off the two shinny screws using a screwdriver. Using a tweezer, take off the little piece of leatherette on the eyepiece shutter dial.

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After the tiny leatherette is taken off, a screw is exposed at the centre of the dial. Unscrew it 🙂

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Take off the dial and the washer underneath.

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At the front of the prism there’s a big piece of leatherette featuring the VEB Pentacon logo. Genently peel it off from one of the lower corners. Expose and unscrew the screw located in the lower middle.

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Now you can open the case. It may not the end of the dissembly depending on what you want to do. Below are the most likely reasons that you have read this far to learn how to dissemble your lovely P6 TTL metered prism:

  1. The prism has no response even with fresh battery installed – this generally attributes to broken electrical wiring. You can rewire it easily as the electrical contacts are generously big. Use thicker and longer wires if you can.
  2. Dusty / dirty prism – in most cases, small amount of dust and dirt are not an issue with meter accuracy or viewing, and not worth the hassle and risk to pop open the case to begin with, let alone going forward and take off the pentaprism. In case you insist, here are the steps:
    • Take off the screws pointed by the blue arrows
    • The pentaprism should be able to come off by pulling it vertically upward
    • Beware not to break anything or scratch the black paint of the pentaprism, which may cause light leaks and result in inaccurate meter reading. The needle-viewfinder periscope (the clear piece of plastic glued onto the needle side of the prism) is particularly easy to break. When it breaks off from the prism, it tends of chip off some glass!!
    • When putting back the pentaprism into the case, there are a few parts that are a PITA hard to position well. Use double-sided tape to help you:
      • the CdS photoresistor and its two connecting wires
      • the gaskets around the prism base used for light-proofing
  3. Stuck eyepiece shutter. The opening and closing of the shutter are operated by a spring (a metallic strip) clamped each side by a slit in the shutter on one side and the dail on another. The original design makes it more likely to stuck close than open 😦
    Check if the spring is still inside the slit of the shutter. If so, untighten the screw pointed by the red arrow and pull the whole metal part (dial stopper) against the direction of the arrow by just a little bit. Re-tighten the screw. This way, the dial will spend more of its cycle in open shutter position in each rotation, and thus less likely to stuck close in the future.
    If the spring is dislocated (i.e. out of the shutter slit), you will most likely need to take off the whole pentaprism. Follow #2 above and then do the tweak in previous paragraph.

If your prism has inaccurate meter readings, you don’t need to dissemble it. I will show you how to calibrate the meter in Part 2.

How to glue the leatherette back?

If you peel it off gentally and not too frequently, its adhesiveness should be good enough to stick back to where it used to be without noticeable traces of “tampering”. If it doesn’t stick, you need to glue it back and rubber cement is a no-no. I have tried Weldbond and it worked well. Apply a thin layer of glue on both sides and wait for one minute before bonding. I heard people using Tacky Glue with good results but I haven’t tried – make sure though you’re using the pH-neutral variety because the original one is slightly acidic, which may be harmful to the leatherette in long run.

Good luck!

6 Comments

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6 responses to “DIY: TTL metered prism for Pentacon Six – Part 1

  1. Keep it up, bookmarked and referred some mates.

  2. Merci pour cet article passionnant. Je peux vous demander quel template vous utilisez ? Il rend vraiment bien…

    • LUIGI PROTA

      Nel mio prisma, non riesco a vedere l’ago del galvanometro guardando all’interno del mirino. Si vede solo la finestrella verticale luminosa, ma l’ago no.
      Da cosa dipende ciò?

  3. Andreas

    Following this decription I was able disassemble and to reassemble a metered prism – thanks! One problem I however have: the sreen lense in the bottom is loose. How is this usually secured?

  4. Joe

    Thank you for a very helpful post!
    One little suggestion, on a picture 4 and 5, when taking of the aperture ring, firs unscrew one side and loosen of another half way, than screw back in first one only without aperture ring, and then do the same on the other side. That way it will hold again two slim rings that are part of a same mount. I had some hard time to put them back again and they were on the way all the time:)

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