I took a $20 chance on this on eBay. It came with the box and looked somewhat taken care of, but of course the seller "didn't know much about cameras."
It is a late 40's model Universal Camera Corporation "Roamer II." For the most part it looks like its in good shape. Minimal rust spots, lens looks mostly clear, leather is all in tact, bellows appear to be in good shape, shutter release moves up and down easily... However the shutter appears to be stuck, along with the aperture blades.
I figured out how to unscrew the lens and get to the mechanisms but that's as far as I'm willing to go, as I have ZERO repair experience. From the pictures below, does this look repairable? Or should I chalk it up to a $20 piece of junky home decor?
Would anyone be willing to help me get the shutter operable for a nominal fee and a case of beer?
It's certainly worth a shot. That looks like it ought to work no sweat.
I would put some solvent on a cotton swab and dab it around where things look like the pivot, pushing the little levers here and there very gently until the two blades move -- those shutters are very simple things, mechanically, and usually just get dry and stuck. Once it moves even a bit you'll see which does what and it should loosen up.
I have an old bottle of dry cleaning fluid I use for such things -- it evaporates without residue. Try to find something like that.
Do it! What you can lose? It can be simple fix or not? And if you succeed you will be very proud of it! Last night, my 16 year old son fixed Kodak 6x9 Brownie. Does this camera use 120 or 620 film?
Good luck!
O, that is easy question. For camera related things, like cleaning old grease nothing beats Ronsonol - lighter fluid.
For lubricating - white lithium grease, you can buy it in Home depot.
Don't go crazy with it, less is more! Also take detailed, close up pictures of all your steps if you take thing apart.
If you like to go fancy there are special camera/lenses lubricants at http://www.micro-tools.com
Good luck!
Goran