Cover that Selenium Cell Meter to Make it Last

Revere camera with large Selenium cell meter.
Many vintage cameras of the late 1950's to almost the mid-1970's used a kind of internal light meter that created a small amount of electricity simply by being exposured to light. They're called Selenium cell meters, named for the light-sensitive material that produces the electrical charge magic.

Selenium cell meters are easily identified by a faceted or multi-waffled glass plate on the front of the camera or around the lens. Often these meter cells were small, as not a lot of electricity was needed to measure light leverls, but it was not uncommon to see very large use of Selenium in cameras where automatic exposure systems required more voltage (thus more sunlight) to operate.

An upside to Selenium cells is that they did not require batteries to operate. As long as light struck the cells, they could make enough juice to move a meter needle and tell you which f-stop or shutter speed would be best for the light at hand. If you left your camera in its leather case, the meter was effectively shut off.

The downside to this system was that the light-producing ability of Selenium cells eventually ceased over time with exposure to light, particularly bright sunshine. Its ability would be consumed.

Many vintage cameras are found with dead Selenium meters. Sometimes it's because of deteriorating wiring due to poor soldering or a shock to the meter system, which were pretty delicate in those days. But very often, the camera may have been stored in the "on" position with its meter cell exposed to light over years, maybe decades.

Camera collectors like to show-off their possessions on shelving or cabinets. Only natural. But care should be taken to protect examples with Selenium cell meters. Left on a shelf in even a dimly lit room, the light-sensing ability of the Selenium cell is "on".

If you plan on passing on a working model of some old Kodak Retina or Canonette to family or other collectors, you really should turn off the Selenium cell until you either want to use the camera, or want to display it for someone. I've found the simplest method is to use black electrical tape. It's cheap, stylishly black, opaque and easily removed at any time. For less than two bucks you can cut enough light-blocking tape to over hundreds of meter cells.

Hopefully, by covering the meter cell with tape, you'll buy enough time to give the next generation of collector working examples of these 60+ year-old cameras.

Comments

  1. I've found that when I'm buying a selenium-metered camera, if it comes with a case or bag the meter almost always still works -- and if it doesn't come cased, the meter's always dead.

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  2. Fabulous tip!! I'll find that lens cover and tape it on.

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  3. I believe that moisture and corrosion are as much to blame for "dead" selenium meters. With care, they can last decades. I recently acquired a Weston Master meter (the first model, introduced in the late 1930s) that worked perfectly and was still accurate. It had been kept in a dry environment in its original case.

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  4. I have, just now, dismantled and destroyed a weston master 5 and found the cell dead to a fluke 77 meter.I have a working 5 and a dead 4 to keep me happy. My Nazi Zeiss Contax (with an f2 Sonnar)has a meter on top and that's dead too as is the vertical blind shutter. I am/was such a vandal that, aged 19, I thought I'd dismantle a leica 1c to mend the silk shutter. Springs everywhere and for the last 50 years it's sat in a box with the Hektor lens, in a cupboard, hoping I shall, one day, send it to a careful and competant person for mending. I may (definitely will. Ed.) die first, such a shame. Did you know that the bod who designed the Leitz lens named it Hektor after his pooch?

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