Difference between revisions of "Watameter"

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'''Watameter''' was a widely-sold German series of [[rangefinder (device)|accessory rangefinder]]s of the photo accessory brand ''[[Wata]]''. A Watameter II could be used to measure distances between 55cm and infinity. It could be attached to a camera's accessory shoe.
 
  
Watameters were produced by the company Edmund Wateler in Braunschweig.
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| image_source=https://www.flickr.com/photos/thorpehamlet/5614024991/in/pool-camerawiki
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| image=https://live.staticflickr.com/5303/5614024991_8842f5b111_w.jpg
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| image_align=right
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| image_text=Watameter I
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|image_by= John-Henry Collinson
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|image_rights=wp
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'''Watameter''' was a widely-sold German series of [[rangefinder (device)|accessory rangefinder]]s of the photo accessory brand ''[[Wata]]''. A Watameter I or a Watameter II could be used to measure distances between 55cm and infinity. It could be attached to a camera's accessory shoe. All Watameters have a knurled rangefinder thumbwheel, with a smaller knurled screw upon it as means to adjust the rangefinder to indicate infinity exactly at the upper end of its scale, i.e. at <big>'''&infin;'''</big>. Another small adjustment knurl at Watameters' I, II and Super's side is for correction of the rangefinder images overlapping to make the devices optically functional.
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Watameters were produced by the company [[Wata|Edmund Wateler]] in Braunschweig.
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{{Flickr image
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| image_source=https://www.flickr.com/photos/heritagefutures/5199007105/in/pool-camerawiki
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| image=https://live.staticflickr.com/4126/5199007105_901b951036_m.jpg
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| image_align=left
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| image_text=Watameter I, front plate variant
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|image_by= Dirk HR Spennemann
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|image_rights=wp
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}}{{Flickr image
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| image_source=https://www.flickr.com/photos/thorpehamlet/6124755418/in/pool-camerawiki
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| image=https://live.staticflickr.com/6075/6124755418_eb97926afe_n.jpg
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| image_align=center
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| image_text=Watameter Condor's measuring range began with 3 ft.
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|image_by= John-Henry Collinson
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|image_rights=wp
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}}
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{{Flickr image
 
{{Flickr image
| image_source=https://www.flickr.com/photos/thorpehamlet/7651529758/in/pool-camerawiki
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| image_source=https://www.flickr.com/photos/thorpehamlet/15609065189/in/pool-camerawiki
| image=https://live.staticflickr.com/7259/7651529758_93b5f03aa3_n.jpg
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| image=https://live.staticflickr.com/7505/15609065189_ffeb70b233_m.jpg
 
| image_align=right
 
| image_align=right
| image_text=Watameter I, with scales for both, meters and feet
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| image_text=Watameter Super
 
|image_by= John-Henry Collinson
 
|image_by= John-Henry Collinson
 
|image_rights=wp
 
|image_rights=wp
}}{{Flickr image
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}}
| image_source=http://www.flickr.com/photos/eskimogus/4139576367/in/pool-camerawiki
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The Watameter II and the Watameter Super were versions, in which the distance could be read directly through the rangefinder ocular, left hand to the measuring spot. The Watameter II even had only that distance display inside whilst the Watameter Super's enhanced distance scale partially has to be read from the meter's thumb wheel's cm scale, i.e. all distances between 30cm and 50cm.
| image=http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2662/4139576367_51a47331a3_w.jpg
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{{Flickr image
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| image_source=https://www.flickr.com/photos/31319546@N08/23810498669/in/pool-camerawiki
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| image=https://live.staticflickr.com/1506/23810498669_5c41a3be05_z_d.jpg
 
| image_align=left
 
| image_align=left
| image_text=Watameter
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| image_text=Watameter almost like the Watameter Condor, and<br/>a sample of an almost equal watameter badged "Mastra - Germany"
|image_by= Gustavo Vasquez
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|image_by= Adrian Gee
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|image_rights=wp
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}}
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{{brr}}{{Flickr image
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| image_source=https://www.flickr.com/photos/thorpehamlet/6124188713/in/pool-camerawiki
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| image=https://live.staticflickr.com/6090/6124188713_7db02680a5_m.jpg
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| image_align=right
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| image_text=Watameter II
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|image_by= John-Henry Collinson
 
|image_rights=wp
 
|image_rights=wp
 
}}{{brl}}
 
}}{{brl}}
  
Super-Watameter was the deluxe version, in which the distance sould be read directly in the viewfinder.
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Some say the Watameters were also sold under the TELEX brand, but it seems that at least the outer design was sightly different.
 
 
Watameter was also sold under the TELEX brand.
 
  
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{{br}}
 
==Links==
 
==Links==
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{{Flickr image
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| image_source=http://www.flickr.com/photos/eskimogus/4139576367/in/pool-camerawiki
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| image=http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2662/4139576367_51a47331a3_m.jpg
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| image_align=right
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| image_text=Watameter
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|image_by= Gustavo Vasquez
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|image_rights=wp
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}}
 
*[https://www.butkus.org/chinon/watameter/watameter.htm Watameter user manual] (in German) at [https://www.butkus.org/chinon/ Butkus.org]
 
*[https://www.butkus.org/chinon/watameter/watameter.htm Watameter user manual] (in German) at [https://www.butkus.org/chinon/ Butkus.org]
 
*[https://kameramuseum.de/objekte/wata-watameter-ii/ Watameter II] at [https://www.kameramuseum.de Kurt Tauber's Kameramuseum]
 
*[https://kameramuseum.de/objekte/wata-watameter-ii/ Watameter II] at [https://www.kameramuseum.de Kurt Tauber's Kameramuseum]

Revision as of 20:59, 13 June 2024

Watameter was a widely-sold German series of accessory rangefinders of the photo accessory brand Wata. A Watameter I or a Watameter II could be used to measure distances between 55cm and infinity. It could be attached to a camera's accessory shoe. All Watameters have a knurled rangefinder thumbwheel, with a smaller knurled screw upon it as means to adjust the rangefinder to indicate infinity exactly at the upper end of its scale, i.e. at . Another small adjustment knurl at Watameters' I, II and Super's side is for correction of the rangefinder images overlapping to make the devices optically functional.

Watameters were produced by the company Edmund Wateler in Braunschweig.


The Watameter II and the Watameter Super were versions, in which the distance could be read directly through the rangefinder ocular, left hand to the measuring spot. The Watameter II even had only that distance display inside whilst the Watameter Super's enhanced distance scale partially has to be read from the meter's thumb wheel's cm scale, i.e. all distances between 30cm and 50cm.



Some say the Watameters were also sold under the TELEX brand, but it seems that at least the outer design was sightly different.


Links