Showing posts with label klio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label klio. Show all posts

Friday, 4 October 2013

Comparison between Ikonta 520, Bob 510 and Nettar 515


Comparison between Ikonta 520, Bob 510 and Nettar 515:

These three cameras from Zeiss Ikon share the same aluminium casting for their bodies.  This makes them very similar cameras.  They all take 120 film and they all produce half-frame negatives of 6 x 4.5 cm.  The details, however, are different.  I shall give the differences between them one model at a time, starting with the oldest.
Ikonta 520
This camera was produced from 1931 and is using the old fashioned dial set shutter - the disc at the top with the word 'Derval' on it..  The adjuster for the aperture is at the bottom of the shutter housing and requires the user to turn the camera around so that the scale can be seen.  The lens is a Novar triplet lens.  There is also a leather hand strap on this camera and the catch to close the back is solid.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Blog copyright by John Margetts, 2014
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Bob 510
Next is the Bob 510 (sold in the UK as a Nettar 510).  This is a slightly later camera first produced in 1934 and has a more modern rim set shutter - the dial is now replaced with a ring around the shutter housing.  Shutter speeds and apertures are the same, but the aperture adjuster is now on top of the shutter housing, behind the speed selector.  This means that the user can adjust the aperture with the camera pointing at the subject.  Perhaps not a major advance  but will have been less frustrating to use.  The lens is now a Nettar rather than the Novar - still a triplet but a different design.  There is no hand strap on this camera and the catch for the back is less secure than on the Ikonta

Nettar 515
All three together, oldest on the left, newest on the right.
Last is the Nettar 515.  This is later again, 1937, and also has the rim set shutter.  The shutter is now a Klio (on non-Zeiss Ikon cameras known as Prontor) with more shutter speeds (up to 1/175 and a few slow speeds).  The aperture adjuster is still on top, behind the speed adjuster, and there is now a delay setting lever below the shutter housing.  As with the Ikonta, the lens is a Novar triplet.  This shutter requires cocking before use  and there is an ancillary shutter release button on the camera body.  There is also provision to fit an optional brilliant finder on this camera although mine does not have this.  This model also has no hand strap and it has the same catch as the Bob 510



Tuesday, 14 May 2013

Voigtlander Vito I




Voigtlander Vito
I have used as a title for this article 'Vito I' but the camera is actually the Vito - Voigtlander were not aware of the forthcoming Vito range at this point.  I already have an article on the Vito II here and much in that article applies here as well.  The two cameras are very similar as you might expect.  The lens serial number says the lens was made in 1945 which is also the probable date of manufacture - one of the first cameras to be made in war-ravished Germany.

lens: Skopar
focal length: 50mm
apertures: 3.5 to 16
focus range: 1 metre to infinity
lens fitting: fixed
shutter: Prontor II
speeds:  1/5 to 1/200
flash: synchronised for bulbs
film size:  35mm

The camera is a folder and nicely compact when closed.  It measures 120mm by 70mm by 40mm closed and 120mm by 70mm by 80mm when open.  Closed, it nicely fits in a trouser or jacket pocket.  The only distinguishing mark on the closed camera is an ornate 'V' on the lens door and a fairly indistinct 'Voigtlander' is embossed on the leatherette on the back together with the model name 'Vito'.  There is also the country of origin embossed on the back which is 'Germany'.  As Germany is the English name for the country this indicates that it is an official import.  Strangely, for an official import, the focussing scale is in metres rather than feet, suggesting that Voigtlander were not fully geared up for export in 1945.
Vito top view

The top plate is very uncluttered.  There is a knurled ring at either end.  The right-hand ring is the film advance and the left-hand ring the rewind.  In the centre of the top plate is a very small, reverse Galilean viewfinder.  The eyepiece is only 5mm by 2.5mm.  The image seen is roughly 0.5 times life size.  This is very small compared to more modern viewfinders but it is more than adequate.  There is also a frame counter which counts up from one.  There is no accessory shoe (flash shoe) although one was available as an extra and fitted over the viewfinder.

On the rear of the top plate is a lever.  In the normal position (down) the film advance will only advance one frame.  When raised, the film can be advanced as far as you want and can be rewound.  The toothed wheel which is exposed by raising the this lever can be used to set the frame number to one.

The underside of the camera contains three items.  Close to the centre is a 3/8 Whitworth tripod boss.  A 1/4 Whitworth insert would have been available for the more usual tripod size.  There is also a button to release the lens door.  This is spring loaded and partially opens the door.  This door never sprung open under its own steam and from new they needed the user to fully open the door once it was released.

The third item on the base is two 'feet'.  These are little more than pins.  A third foot is on the lens door giving three feet altogether which allow the camera to sit stably on a flat surface.  This is primarily intended to allow group portraits using the self-timer.

When the door is opened, the lens comes forward on its bellows and locks in place.  The shutter release is on the top edge of the door together with a threaded socket for a standard cable release.
Vito - lens door open

The lens is a Skopar f3.5, 50mm lens.  This is the original version of the famous Color-Skopar and is not calculated for colour film.  However, it is intended for panchromatic film so should perform well with colour film.  See the test pictures below for details.  This lens focusses from one metre to infinity and has Voigtlander's usual two Happy Snapper settings - a circle for the hyperfocal distance at f5.6 (approximately five metres to infinity at f5.6 or 2.5 metres to infinity at f16) and a triangle which gives a focus range of 2.5 metres to five metres at f5.6 (ideal for groups).  This lens has no blue/purple tinge and so cannot have been coated as was normal post-WWII and so will be liable to flare.

The shutter is a Prontor II (which is the same as a Klio on a Zeiss Ikon camera) which is a pre-war design and was soon to be updated to the Prontor S.  This Prontor II has a PC connector and so must be synchronised for flash - I would suspect for fast flash bulbs (F: sync) but there is no indication of this on the shutter housing (my Vito II has a Pronto shutter and this is specifically marked F:).  Shutter speeds are 1/5, 1/10, 1/25, 1/50, 1/100 and 1/200 which is more than adequate.  The bezel of the shutter housing bears the shutter name - Prontor II - Gauthier's maker logo and Voigtlander's script name.
Vito - lens and shutter

There is a self-timer lever which we are always told not to use on old cameras to prevent damage to the shutter.  It barely works on this camera, taking 16 seconds to actuate the shutter and then needing a little help from my finger over the last two or three seconds.

This shutter needs cocking before use - the cocking lever moves from left to right and up to cock the shutter.

Apertures available are f3.5 to f16.  As there are no click-stops, you can set an intermediate value if you want to.  The only other item of note on the shutter assembly is a stellate lever.  I am not entirely sure what this is for but I suspect it was to do with the hinged yellow filter that the early Vitos were fitted with.  The shutter bezel has three screws in it that are also part of the filter assembly.  When production had used up the store of pre-war parts, the bezel no longer had these three screws.

Inside is where this camera gets interesting.  The design dates from 1939 and the camera was intended to use unperforated 35mm film.  As the film was unperforated, there are no sprockets in the camera.  Instead, the camera judges the film framing with a feeler roller as in an up-market 120 camera. I have been led to believe  by the Interweb that this camera was designed to use Kodak's 828 film which is unperforated 35 mm film with backing paper like 120 film. As the film came on a spool with backing paper (again, as with 120 film) there are springs fitted to the film chambers to keep the film tight on the spools. Actually, looking at the camera, there is no reason why the camera should not have used unperforated 35 mm film in a reloadable cassette - Leica and Zeiss Ikon made such cassettes for their 35 mm cameras. I have never seen a 1939 Vito - this would tells us immediately whether the camera used 828 film or a loadable cassette as 828 film would require a red window on the back of the camera to allow the user to see at least the first frame number. There is no red window on my 1945 Vito - was there one on the 1939 version? When production restarted in 1945, Voigtlander decided to modify the camera for modern perforated 35mm film (135 format).  The only real change is that the film gate (the rectangular opening that lets the light hit the film in the correct place) is reduced to 24mm by 36mm (originally it had been 30mm by 40mm).

The film take up chamber will take the standard spool from a 35mm cassette as a take-up spool or an empty cassette can be fitted which means that when the film is finished you can open the back and cut the film with the exposed part already in a cassette.

These pictures were taken with this camera on Agfa Vista plus 200 ISO colour negative film (details here): (the black wedge would seem to be a scanning artifact.  The frames all overlap about 1-2 mm and this overlap is also wedge shaped)

Cowslip close-up (from one metre away)

Lincoln Broadgate

Lincoln High Street

Lincoln Pottergate

Tuesday, 9 August 2011

Zeiss Ikon Nettar family



Zeiss Ikon produced quite a series of cameras called Nettar - both before and after WWII. These range from cameras producing 6cm by 9cm to 6cm by 4.5 cm negatives.  Information on these is conflicting to say the least.

I have four Nettars - two are very early ones from 1934-ish (the year Nettars were first sold), from 1937 and the newest from the early 1950s.  I shall describe them separately as they are totally different cameras.  The four Nettars are 510 (Bob), 515/2 (the older ones), 515 (the newer one) and 517/16 (almost new one).


Left to right: Nettar 515,  Nettar 515/2,  Bob 510,  Nettar 517/16

Bob 510

This camera is very very similar to the Nettar 515.  Indeed, this camera (Bob 510) was sold in the UK as a Nettar 510 - the first of the Nettar line.  The Nettar 515 is obviously an update of the Bob/Nettar 510.  I am basing that on the dates for introduction I have found on the Internet: 1934 for the 510, 1937 for the 515 and the fact that the 510 is a much lower spec. than the 515.  However, Tubbs has the dates of introduction as 1938 for the 510 and 1934 for the 515.  This seems unlikely to me as the 510 has  hinge on the baseboard that will not allow the fitting of a top-plate shutter release while the 515 hinge does.  There would be no advantage in redesigning a perfectly good hinge in order to make a cheaper camera.  Also, the lens standard on the 515 has provision to fit an optional brilliant finder while the 510 does not.  Again, there would be no commercial point in redesigning the lens standard to prevent the attachment of the brilliant finder in the cheaper camera.  The re-engineering would cost needless money and also prevent potential sales of optional auxiliaries. The serial number of the body tells me it was made in 1936

Apart from the lens/shutter options and the differences mentioned above, the 510 and 515 are identical.

The name "Bob" is an estimable one.  It  is an Ernemann name and dates from 1914.  Ernemann was one of the four companies (Goertz, Contessa-Nettal, ICA and Ernemann) who combined under the aegis of the Carl Zeiss Foundation to form Zeiss Ikon in 1926.  Zeiss Ikon continued to sell Bob III and Bob IV cameras but were using up stock from before the merger.  These Ernemann Bobs bequeathed nothing but the name to the Bob 510.

As I said, the Bob 510 was marketed in the UK as the Nettar 510 but my specimen is clearly a Bob with the name "Bob" embossed in the leatherette and the distance scale is in metres.  I am always a bit uneasy when I buy German versions of cameras from the 1930s - they were certainly not retailed here in the UK.  I suspect many were taken as war booty by British soldiers or "bought" in exchange for unavailable items.  However, that is now fairly distant past and is (always was) beyond my control.

This is a half-frame camera - full frame for 120 film is 6cm by 9cm.  This camera produces 6cm by 4.5cm negatives - 16 to a roll of film.  This is roughly four times as large as a 35mm negative and most of the defects of an old, cheap lens are off-set by the need to enlarge the pictures four times less.

The lens on this camera is  a Nettar Anastigmat 1:6.3 with a focal length of 7.5 cm.  This was below the standard for the time and marks the camera as a cheap version.  F6.3 is very slow and faster lenses were available, in fact the 515 had a f4.5 lens just a couple of years later.  Focussing is courtesy of the front cell only - usual on the lower end of the market, even with upmarket lenses such as Tessars.  Focussing is from just short of 1.2 metres to infinity.  This lens is fairly soft with a predisposition to flare as you can see from the photographs below.

The shutter is the fairly crude Derval by Gauthier - speeds are 1/25, 1/50 and 1/100 plus B and T.  There is no delayed action lever.  The fascia of the shutter, which was supplied by Zeiss Ikon rather than Gauthier, is a black and chrome Art Deco disc more reminiscent of Agfa of the time than nit is of Zeiss Ikon.  The shutter is of the everset variety - there is no need to cock the shutter first as on a Klio or Prontor shutter.  The shutter release lever has quite a lot of travel before it acts making firing the shutter a bit uncertain.  This is much easier in landscape orientation but in portrait orientation one finger of the right hand has to move well under the lens while the rest of the hand has to hold the camera steady.  As is usual, the lens/shutter combination has Happy Snapper settings signified by red dots.  These are just larger than f11 and about seven metres.  With the slow films of the 1930s, this would have required a slow shutter speed of 1/25 or 1/50 except in really bright light.  The resulting pictures would not have stood any enlarging, but the customers for this camera would have been unlikely to have had anything other than contact prints from the 6cm by 4.5 cm negatives.

The viewfinder is a folding Galilean finder.  The eye-piece is very small - 3mm by 5mm - and difficult to use while wearing spectacles.  To add to this difficulty, the front part on my specimen is very worn and leans forward at an alarming angle.  This means that precision of composition is not possible - but if I wanted precision I would not be using a seventy plus year old camera.

There is one tripod bush on the bottom at the end of the film holder.  This protrudes from the casing and means that the tripod will not fit very securely.  The main boss is 3/8 Whitworth but will take a 1/4 Whitworth insert - it probably had one to begin with.
Views along the banks of the Sincil towards Lincoln cathedral.


515/2
This camera is a full frame 120 camera - that is it gives 8 off 6cm by 9cm negatives.  This makes it an expensive camera to use but that is offset by the greater quality of the much larger negative. The body serial number tells me that it was made in 1932.

The lens is a Nettar anastigmat with a focal length of 11 cm (cm before 1945 and mm after 1945) which is "normal" for a 6cm x 9cm negative.  This lens has an aperture range of f/4.5 to f/32 - quite a fast lens for its time.

The shutter is a Telma everset made by Gauthier - "everset" means the shutter does not need cocking - with a speed range of 1/25, 1/50 and 1/100 plus B and T.  (B keeps the shutter open while the shutter release is pressed,  T keeps then shutter open until the shutter release is pressed a second time).  The shutter release is on the lens assembly and has two definite parts to its travel - tensioning the shutter and releasing the shutter.  Although it requires a firmer touch than a Compur shutter which needs cocking, it is much faster in action.  The shutter also has a delay action lever which delays the shutter by around ten seconds.

This was the fourth cheapest Nettar 520/2 - Zeiss Ikon advertised it at £5/10/0 in 1936. The bottom of the range (f6.3 Nettar lens and Derval shutter) sold for £3/15/0 and the top of the range (f4.5 Tessar and a normal Compur shutter) sold for £9/17/6 (all prices in 'Old Money').  The lens has a focussing range of slightly less than 4'6" to infinity.  Both the focussing scale and the aperture scale have a Happy Snapper setting marked in red - about f13 and about 40 feet.  Basically, this means that 40 feet is the lens's hyperfocal distance at f13 and nearly everything will be in focus at these setting.

There are two viewfinders - a brilliant finder that can be turned for Portrait or Landscape formats and a direct vision finder that is simply two open frames.  I find brilliant finders hard to use but I suspect that this is (at least partly) due to inexperience.  I much prefer the direct vision finder.

The camera is self-erecting - that is, you press the button on the body, the baseboard opens and the lens lines up correctly.  You still need to pull the base board into position as it is not spring loaded like the 515 is.  The same body button also opens the direct vision finder.  There are two tripod bushes - one on the base board near the hinge and one on the bottom in the end of the film holder.  This means that this tripod bush will not hold the camera very securely.  Both are 3/8 Whitworth threads, both with 1/4 Whitworth inserts held in place with a grub screw.

The camera is designed to use Orthochromatic film which is not sensitive to red light.  The red view hole in the back for noting negative numbers has no cover and if the camera is used with modern Panchromatic film, a degree of fogging could occur through this hole.

As you can see, there is a problem with the bellows on this old camera - there is a slight sag where the bellows join the camera body.  I am not sure how easy this would be to fix.  The many black dots are dirt that has been attracted to static on the film - a good but expensive way to clean the inside of the camera.
Cornhill, Lincoln, August 2011


Silver Street, Lincoln, August 2011


Stamp End, Lincoln - Fujifilm Provia


515

My Nettar 515 was made in 1937, judging by the body serial number.  It is of the 6cm x 4.5 cm flavour and is small enough to be considered a pocket camera even if it is rather heavy for a jacket pocket.

The Nettar 515 takes 120 film (all of the range do) and produces 16 pictures on a roll of 120 film. It is essentially a half-frame camera - as it uses each negative number on the film twice - once in each of the two red windows.

The camera sports a Novar Anastigmat lens - 7.5 cm focal length and maximum aperture of f/4.5, minimum aperture of f/22. Actually, the aperture lever goes beyond the f/22 mark by as much as the distance between f/16 and f/22 so perhaps is closing down to as little as f/32 at its limit. The shutter is a Klio made by Gauthier (which was actually owned by Zeiss Ikon). As this is a rim set shutter, it is not of the everset variety that early Klios were and needs cocking before a picture can be taken. Shutter speeds on a Klio are 1, 2, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100, 175 - all fractions of a second. This is adequate but causes problems in very bright conditions. It is probably better to restrict this camera to ASA (sorry, ISO) 125 film or slower.
The shutter has a Happy Snapper setting indicated by red dots. This is f/10 and focus at 24 feet. At this setting just about everything will be in focus. That is to say that 24 feet is the hyperfocal distance at f/10.

There is a delayed action lever which delays the shutter by about ten seconds which allows the photographer to get himself into the frame. On this camera this works but the usual advice for old cameras applies - don't use it. This is because the spring that controls the delayed action is fairly weak and might break with age. As is normal with pre-WWII shutters, the release lever is on the shutter assembly. By the mid 30s, it was de rigeur to have the shutter release on the camera body, which is exactly where it is with this camera. It is linked to the lever on the shutter assembly by two inter-connected levers - a bit cumbersome but it works well enough.

There is one tripod bush on the bottom at the end of the film holder.  This protrudes from the casing and means that the tripod will not fit very securely.  The main boss is 3/8 Whitworth but has a 1/4 Whitworth insert held in place by a small grub screw.

There is also a tapered thread cable release socket but no flash connection - flash was unusual in the 1930s, particularly with amateurs.

The viewfinder is primitive - particularly by modern standards. It is a Galilean finder - two frames each with a lens which combine to give a viewfinder image slightly smaller than life size.  Once a few pictures have been taken, it becomes second nature to use, although it can never be as accurate as a modern Galilean finder contained in one housing. There is provision for the attachment of a brilliant finder but my experience of these leaves me preferring the cruder Galilean finder.

A scanned copy of the original Nettar manual for this camera is available as a download.   Also available is Zeiss Ikon's 1930s exposure guide.
Lincoln Arboretum, 2011

Drury lane, Lincoln - looking north


Nettar 517/16.

This is a post (WWII) war Nettar and has some improvements over the pre-war Nettars. There were two versions of post-war Nettars - 517/16 and 518/16 (the 16 in the designation means it takes twelve pictures on a roll of 120 (or BII) film. No, I'm afraid you will have to ask Zeiss Ikon why 16 and not 12). The only difference that I can see is that the 518 has a double exposure interlock and the 517 does not.  This is a 517 and this comes in two versions. Mine has a square design top plate and later 517/16 cameras has a softer curved profile to the top plate.

Although these were not top-of-the-range cameras, they were not cheap either. I have a 1952 camera catalogue which prices the Nettar (not sure whether 517 or 518) at £16/13/3 (which is old money. It would be £16.66 in new money) for the basic model or £21/15/9 (£21.79 in new money). That is more than an average working man would earn in a week (£9 for a man, on average). In terms of an average man's wage in 2013, it equates to over £1,000 for a Nettar in modern money.

The controls are pretty basic (and much the same as the Nettars described above). On the top plate is a lens release button, a shutter release button and a winding knob. All other controls are on the shutter housing. Here is the diaphragm (f6.3 to f22), shutter speed (1/25, 1/75 and 1/200) and focusing (marked as being 4.5 feet to infinity but it focusses much closer - I suspect to one metre or three feet).

The lens is a Novar ( the same as on my 515) which is a triplet. These produce good results (better than many people expect) but needs to be stopped down for the best results. This lens is only f6.3 wide open so should always give good results.

The shutter is a Vario which is one of Gauthier's cheaper shutters. It only really has one useable speed - 1/200. It does have 1/25 and 1/75 but while these would have been fine for contact prints that were usual in the 1950s the resulting pictures would not bear enlarging due to the camera shake.

As was normal (at least on Zeiss Ikon's cheaper cameras) there are Happy Snapper settings marked with a red dot. These are focus at around 22 feet and slightly wider than f11 aperture. Using this Happy Snapper setting should give you a depth of field from 11 feet to infinity. When stopped down to f22, this lens should give you a depth of field from six feet to infinity.

The lens baseboard hinges down which I prefer as it leaves more room for your hands. it also provides a stable base for the camera which would be useful if the Vario shutter provided a Vorlaufwerk (or delay action) setting, which it does not.  This camera also came with the more expensive Prontor S shutter which does have such a setting.

The release for the baseboard should allow the lens to spring into action just by the release being pressed. This is not so on my camera which is probably due to lack of use. I shall oil it directly and try the action a few times to see if it will free up. It is no big deal if it does not. The viewfinder on the 517/16 (and 518/16) has been modernised over the pre-war versions but not to provide an improvement. The viewfinder is now built-in to the top plate instead of being two folding frames; unfortunately, it is also much smaller. It is now too small for me to use with my glasses on which will make the camera harder to use. The image seen in the viewfinder is also much smaller, about a quarter of real life, and I need to get my really close to the viewfinder - this is why I cannot use it with my glasses on and when I try the metal surround scratches the plastic lenses on my glasses. On top of the viewfinder is an accessory shoe.

The film advance is on the left and on the top. This feels back-to-front to me but it is a perfectly acceptable system. There is one central red window on the back of the camera with a chrome slider to keep light out between shots. The spools are kept securely in place with spring loaded bosses. There is no provision for air flow around the film mask, so with this camera it might be a good idea to open the bellows before winding on the film.  The reason for this is that the expanding bellows can act as a pump and suck the film into the space in the middle of the film mask giving a slightly curved piece of film in front of the lens. Conversely, wait a few seconds between opening the camera and taking the first picture.

Test pictures will be provided as soon as I have had the chance to try the camera out.

30-11-13: I now have my test roll developed - Fuji Provia reversal film.  This camera has quite bad vignetting - it shows more on some pictures than others -I am assuming it has to do with the aperture used. The picture of Lincoln's Exchequergate has hardly any visible vignetting.

Lincoln's Exchequergate

Lindesfarne Castle

Bamburgh Castle


Comparison between Ikonta 520, Bob 510 and Nettar 515:

These three cameras from Zeiss Ikon share the same aluminium casting for their bodies.  This makes them very similar cameras.  They all take 120 film and they all produce half-frame negatives of 6 x 4.5 cm.  The details, however, are different.  I shall give the differences between them one model at a time, starting with the oldest.
Ikonta 520
This camera was produced from 1931 and is using the old fashioned dial set shutter - the disc at the top with the word 'Derval' on it..  The adjuster for the aperture is at the bottom of the shutter housing and requires the user to turn the camera around so that the scale can be seen.  The lens is a Novar triplet lens.  There is also a leather hand strap on this camera and the catch to close the back is solid.


Bob 510
Next is the Bob 510 (sold in the UK as a Nettar 510).  This is a slightly later camera first produced in 1934 and has a more modern rim set shutter - the dial is now replaced with a ring around the shutter housing.  Shutter speeds and apertures are the same, but the aperture adjuster is now on top of the shutter housing, behind the speed selector.  This means that the user can adjust the aperture with the camera pointing at the subject.  Perhaps not a major advance  but will have been less frustrating to use.  The lens is now a Nettar rather than the Novar - still a triplet but a different design.  There is no hand strap on this camera and the catch for the back is less secure than on the Ikonta.

Nettar 515
Last is the Nettar 515.  This is later again, 1937, and also has the rim set shutter.  The shutter is now a Klio (on non-Zeiss Ikon cameras known as Prontor) with more shutter speeds (up to 1/175 and a few slow speeds).  The aperture adjuster is still on top, behind the speed adjuster, and there is now a delay setting lever below the shutter housing.  As with the Ikonta, the lens is a Novar triplet.  This shutter requires cocking before use  and there is an ancillary shutter release button on the camera body.  There is also provision to fit an optional brilliant finder on this camera although mine does not have this.  This model also has no hand strap and it has the same catch as the Bob 510
All three together, oldest on the left, newest on the right.