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I just got a great deal on an M6 Classic, but it has very few bubbles here and there. (nothing major)

I'm sure this subject has been written about multiple times on this forum and some of you may be tired of reading the same thing again and again.

However, I was wondering if it would be possible to reverse the oxidation by getting it to bare zinc and painting it. Would it need to be treated with some type of chemical? Would it happen again? Sending it to Leica is not an option for me and M6 Classic top plates are hard to find online.

So, is there any ways to reverse this zinc plague on the top plate?

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15 minutes ago, otto.f said:

They never should have changed the top plate of the M4

They changed it to overcome the alleged problem of top plate distortion. The usual case of curing one (extremely rare) problem and creating another. Having said that the problem is usually just cosmetic and, in itself, quite rare. My M6 is fine.

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6 hours ago, Steve Ricoh said:

Sadly, TTL top plates wont fit on an M6 Classic. The viewfinder and the shutter speed dial are smaller on the Classics.

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17 hours ago, TommyPlouffe said:

I just got a great deal on an M6 Classic, but it has very few bubbles here and there. (nothing major)

I'm sure this subject has been written about multiple times on this forum and some of you may be tired of reading the same thing again and again.

However, I was wondering if it would be possible to reverse the oxidation by getting it to bare zinc and painting it. Would it need to be treated with some type of chemical? Would it happen again? Sending it to Leica is not an option for me and M6 Classic top plates are hard to find online.

So, is there any ways to reverse this zinc plague on the top plate?

I have a M6 TTL bought used, with a few bubbles. I am careful being aware storing it in a dry cabinet when not in use, and did not see any worsening of the bubbling.

I guess the oxidation was result of negligence of previous owner(s).

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Techincally speaking, one could:

remove top plate, grind or etch away all the chrome and subsurface plating layers, and then grind away the corroded zinc, repolish the grinding, and then replate or prime/paint the whole works.

Possible, but likely not economic - would cost more than an uncorroded camera to begin with, unless it happens to be a collectible. In which case the "non-original" refinishing would still reduce the value.

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On 7/13/2019 at 7:43 PM, adan said:

Techincally speaking, one could:

remove top plate, grind or etch away all the chrome and subsurface plating layers, and then grind away the corroded zinc, repolish the grinding, and then replate or prime/paint the whole works.

Possible, but likely not economic - would cost more than an uncorroded camera to begin with, unless it happens to be a collectible. In which case the "non-original" refinishing would still reduce the value.

Put the grinder away, removing plating is as simple as reversing the process. You would then fill corrosion bubbles in the zinc (not grind it away), before re-plating.

But the question would be 'is it worth it?' The corrosion isn't to do with previous owners daring to do things like use their camera in the rain, or live in a humid country, it is caused by contamination of the zinc itself. So it's potluck, 'no problems with mine' is as random as 'I've had three with corrosion'. 

So while you can buy fairly cheaply a plating kit to remove plating (it always baffles me why people get the sandpaper out to remove plating) it isn't worth it, it will could back again.

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Is the use of zinc on the M6 one of the biggest cost cutting blunders of all time?! Although I like my classic M6, I  try to shut my mind to the fact.

If anyone has access to a competent machine shop it should be possible to fashion a 'proper' brass replacement. 

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25 minutes ago, Steve Ricoh said:

I know, but it's an option... Another being replacing with an MP. But for me it's not economically sensible either, based on the amount of film I use.

I imagine the most economical option is to sell a corroded M6 and buy a non-corroded M6. Either that or a 3D printed plastic copy.😀

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vor 27 Minuten schrieb Steve Ricoh:

Zinc leaves a nasty taste.

I would not go so far. As to my information, only a few production batches right at the beginning suffer from the zinc bubble issue, caused by a faulty plating process - plating is comprised of several layers, not only  the final "black chrome". I keep a 1996 and a 1990 M6, both are still perfect, not a single bubble, whereas a 1985 R4s looks like suffering black pox, even after repeated change of the top cover (but technically still top!).

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