Inspired by the Kiev 10 Automat thread I didn't find a Kiev at the right price, but found what looked liked a decent Zorki 10. Never-ready case in decent condition, a bit of 'leather' finish peeling in one corner but easily glued down, but a ludicrously short strap.
Selenium cell meters are a weak link, but on looking through the viewfinder the needle moved in what looked like an appropriate manner as i moved from indoor shade to outdoor sunshine, so that seemed to be working.
So earlier in the week I went out and shot a film. After a few shots I heard an unpleasant tearing sound. I carried on and yesterday developed it.
Six black rectangles (In one I could just make out a little detail if I held it up to a lamp), and the rest of the film blank. The penultimate black rectangle had slight damage to sprockets, and the sixth had ripped holes. "Dang!" or words to that effect.
Now it could just have been I was a bit too abrupt winding on and had I been more gentle with it the sprockets wouldn't have ripped. The sprocket wheel does seem a bit stiff and maybe some of that old Soviet lube is gungy so things aren't as smooth as they were.
Looking through the back of the camera while firing the shutter and pointing the lens at a sunlit area, I also noticed the aperture was wide open. While setting the aperture manually seems to work OK so it's not jammed. Given the light meter needle is moving as it should, my guess is that the gubbins which uses the light meter to control aperture and shutter speed is broken/stuck.
Set the aperture manually and shutter speed is 1/30th of a second (kind of like an Olympus Trip in that respect, only much heavier), which would almost be workable apart from the whole film failing to advance problem.
Still, it's very pretty in a kind of brutalist way.