Film Camera Battery Issue Old Film Camera That Uses Mercury Batteries, Is There Anything I Can Do?

Old film camera that uses mercury batteries, is there anything I can do? - film camera battery issue

I bought an old movie camera and made the battery is one of the old mercury batteries. I do not know if I can do something against it, I found an adapter, but I'm not sure if it would work, or what is the best thing to do.

2 comments:

Martin S said...

When it is completely mechanical, no batteries can be used with a handheld photometer. Many models are built that way.

If the unit has called for the work of a wine batteery cells the same voltage mercury batteries have (more or less) or you can use hearing aid batteries of suitable size. They also have a voltage of 1.4 V (battery mercury stood at 1.35 V). Hearing Aid Batteries are cheap, but not for long.

If you let us know that the camera used, can defeat really hlpful hmmmmmmmm times.

Anonymous said...

You can use a counter to light (such as solar or separate a new species)

With a point and shoot digital camera (on non-ISO AUTO) (read the message) as Kodak C875 PASM), (and a picture of the sample.

If you use batteries of 1.5 volts, the meter must be calibrated or adjusted.

You can test the batteries of 1.5 volts and see if the device is very accurate (at the beginning as the decrease in reading time can change voltmeter), some 1.3 volts actually voted for a stable level of constant tension in of the time, I think.

I have seen some proper battery voltage on eBay, but do not know whether they are legal to sell and dispose of you here.

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