I've been on the lookout for a 50s / 60s fixed lens rangefinder for my grandson's second camera -- his first camera will be an Olympus Trip. He's only 10 months old but I'm going to be prepared! And my daughter wants to have a couple more kids, so no pressure on him if he's not interested... For one's photographic growth, I think it's ideal to move from the basically automatic Trip where all you have to worry about is composition to a camera where you can learn about exposure and the relationship between shutter speed and aperture, and where you can choose what in the frame to focus on when working with shallow DOF.
Besides the typical Minoltas, Konicas, Olympuses (Olympi?), and even Yashicas, Petri rangefinders appeared on my radar. Specifically, the Petri Racer. I'm a sucker for pretty cameras and I think it's quite charming. It has a match-needle cds meter coupled to the shutter and aperture, but fully manual in that it doesn't automatically set one when you set the other.
One showed up on Etsy at a good price, especially considering the seller had tested it with film -- frozen shutters are a reported problem with these cameras. He reported everything worked fine except the rangefinder, which he said worked intermittently and when it did, the double-image lagged. Hmm... sounded fixable so I bought it and it arrived yesterday.
With the top off, featuring its Green-o-matic (TM) rangefinder
Overview of the rangefinder
The rangefinder double-image projector on its swingarm. This is what was not moving freely.
The grayed-out screw around which the swingarm pivoted. It was a bit mucked up from dirt and age so I loosened it a tad and moved the focus lever on the lens back and forth a bit and it now works fine. Fixed!
Cleaned and fully functional Petri Racer
Now, another issue. This camera, like every 60's / 70s fixed-lens Japanese rangefinder I've handled, has a slightly wobbly lens barrel. This example is a lot less wobbly than the Canonet I used to have, which took extremely sharp pictures. So I probably shouldn't worry about it. But I'm in a tinkering state of mind...
There are three concentric rings that seem could be tightened here. My guess is the outer one might have something to do with the lens wobble. From what I've read on other forum threads, mostly about the Canonet and Hi-Matic, this could be the issue or four screws under the front leatherette could be the issue. I'd rather not try to pull up the leatherette since it doesn't just meet flush with the lens barrel but goes underneath the lens barrel.
I don't have a lens spanner so my question is, is it worth getting one and seeing if I can tighten that outer ring?