Bell & Howell Electric Eye 127
Bell & Howell Electric Eye 127 image by Voxphoto (Image rights) |
The Electric Eye 127 was introduced in 1958 by Bell & Howell.
The 1938 Kodak Super Six-20 was the first camera to offer photocell-controlled autoexposure, but fewer than 730 were ever sold. Bell & Howell's Electric Eye 127 brought autoexposure to the popular snapshooter market, in a whimsically-styled cast-metal body.
A selenium photocell adjusted the two-bladed diaphragm in response to the scene brightness. Twelve 4x4cm exposures could be taken per roll of 127 rollfilm.
Links
- "New Electric-Eye Camera Takes Foolproof Snaps" with an explanation of the metering system, Popular Science February 1959, pg.152-153, at Google Books
- More views of the tweed version at www.westfordcomp.com
Black and tweed version with matching accessory flash image by John Kratz (Image rights) |