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Olympus Trip - Manual Modifcation

by alspix @ Sunday, 12. Feb, 2006 - 05:39:06 pm

I wanted a small, cheap 35mm shooter with manual controls. One of these days I'll get myself one of those nice little 70's compact rangefinders but they cost more than a tenner!! ;-) so for now, I'm making do with an Olympus Trip 35, very common and very cheap.

The downside with the trip is the lack of manual control. There's a "flash mode" that gives aperture control but fixes the shutter speed at 1/40s. The camera is capable of 1/200s in auto mode, it would be nice to be able to access this manually - especially as the auto mode on my £2.50 Trip doesn't work!

After reading the excellent article at Zeropoint.six-something.org, I set about finding a way to manually control the shutter speed, and came up with this little mod which allows both speeds to be selected at will, and doesn't require as much dismantling as the above method.

You need:
Olympus Trip 35 camera
Miniature crosshead screwdriver
Plastic cable tie, about 4mm wide type
A small needle file or hacksaw blade

Now although you don't actually need to strip the camera down, it may be worth doing so so that you can see what you're aiming at; it isn't a difficult job. If you want to do this follow these instructions.

Inside the camera there is a tiny brass flywheel that controls the shutter speed. In order to get the faster speed this wheel must be held in it's "wound up" position. Attached to the wheel is a cam, which when prodded will push the wheel to the fast position. The following picture shows the cam highlighted in red.

inside

The idea is to make a control rod from the cable tie which pushes this cam to select the fast shutter speed. Moving the control rod away reverts to normal 1/40s mode.

This photo shows the view from the side, showing the bit the control rod has to hit (highlighted in red). The area to aim for is between long brass lever and the spring pivot point.

lever

So here's how it's done. Remove the top cover screws (one by the strap lug, two under the film rewind lever. Take off the top cover.

Neatly trim the locking end off the cable tie and thread onto the tie, about an inch from the end.

cable_tie

The locking bit will sit inside the camera body to stop the whole thing being pulled out when you switch between speeds.

File a 5mm deep slot just wide enough so the cable can move through it easily, in the position shown on the camera top cover

lid

Now the tricky bit! Push the cable tie into the mechanism so that it pushes against the cam shown highlighted in the above diagram. This isn't easy beacuse now the camera is assembled you can't easilly see what you're trying to hit!

insert_tie

You should feel very slight resistance as you hit the cam, and the tie should then push in another three millimetres or so. Try the shutter - you should hear if it's operating faster.

Obviously, don't force things. If it doesn't feel quite right, pull out the cable tie and try again. On my first attempt I ended up with the camera stuck in 1/200s mode; it turned out I had dislodged the return spring on the flywheel.

The lock of the tie should be in a position where it just hits the metal casting when the tie is pulled out enough to select 1/40s mode. If it's in the wrong place, slide it off and re-thread.

Finally, replace the top cover with the tie poking out of the slot in the top cover. Trim the tie so it doesn't stick out too far.

That's it! Olympus trip with full manual control! :-)

trip

Wonder if it's possible to add a "B" setting....?

Resources:
K. Praslowicz Photography
Olympus Trip 35

Olympus Trip 35 Flickr Group

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Cliff van der Geugten [Visitor]

25/06/06 @ 12:23

Manual shutterspeed change when your seleniummeter is down without modifications to the camera. Try the following. Cock the shutter with aperturering setting on "A". Push the releaseknob down. Because of the automatic aperture is down it will not fire.Then move aperturering to the desired aperture setting. Take your finger of the releaseknob. At that moment you will notice that the releaseknob is halfway down. If so push the releaseknob and take your picture. It will fire the shutter at 1/200. If the aperturering is not turned to "A" again the releaseknob will keep its halfway position. Cock the shutter and choose your manual aperture setting. The shutterspeed will remain 1/200 or so. If you turn the aperturering back to "A" you will hear a click and the releaseknob will return to its upper position. Then at manual aperture setting it will fire at 1/40 again. If you want to change back to 1/200 proceed as previously written.It works on my Trip 35 (with all metal releaseknob) and maybe worth to try.

alspixalspix pro
25/06/06 @ 21:36

On my camera, the spring that returns the meter needle is broken and the needle flaps between the red flag, 1/40 and 1/200 positions randomly.

If I get it to the 1/200 position, your method works. If it's in the under exposed, red flag position, it works as you describe, but I have to move the aperture setting from A over to f22 (with finger held on the release). As I move to f22, I can feel the shutter release move down further slightly. Then I can re-select another aperture and it fires at 1/200.

This is a great "hack" to be aware of on a fully working camera too as it allows manual control just by placing your hand over the selenium ring first.

Fantastic stuff, thanks for the comment!

sandra [Visitor]

24/06/08 @ 18:17

I have an olympus camera but the one with a 3.5 Mega memory card. Can I improve something to it? --- auto body repair quotes

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