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Sorry about the crappy mobile phone shots. You can see the depth of the glass at the upper right side of the mirror in the first pic.
In the last shot, the reflection comes directly from the metal surface coated on the back of the mirror.
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Nice. I didn't know you could do that. Good to know. I was heartbroken in 1975 when I mowed lawns and saved all summer for a brand new Yashica 124G ($115 USD at the time). It arrived to me with a broken mirror and it took months of phone calls and waiting to get it fixed.
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You can bet I'm going to try this with a few of the cheap old 620s I need cleaned up.
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Wow -- whoda thunk it! Thanks for this bit of insight, I have an old Flexaret III that might be a candidate (once I unstick the slower shutter speeds!)
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Yep, all those first-surface mirrors, right under our noses 
Actually, I think the original link I posted was for a large reflector for a projection TV.
I've seen other people do the same thing with acrylic mirrors. The plastic is obviously easier to shape. I think they used them for laser displays.
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 Originally Posted by Sethasaurus
Sorry about the crappy mobile phone shots. You can see the depth of the glass at the upper right side of the mirror in the first pic.
In the last shot, the reflection comes directly from the metal surface coated on the back of the mirror.
Oops! The thumbnails are in reverse order..
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From The Land List:
"old unwanted/discarded plastic Polaroid cameras using SX-70 or 600 film (i.e. OneStep or Pronto! models) can prove to be a very inexpensive source of front-surface mirrors for optical projects.."
http://www.rwhirled.com/landlist/nonland.htm
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