Difference between revisions of "Bronica ETR"
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* [http://www.hugorodriguez.com/articulos/zenzabronicaetr.htm Bronica ETR] in the [http://www.hugorodriguez.com/ website of Hugo Rodriguez] | * [http://www.hugorodriguez.com/articulos/zenzabronicaetr.htm Bronica ETR] in the [http://www.hugorodriguez.com/ website of Hugo Rodriguez] | ||
In French : | In French : | ||
− | *[http://www.collection-appareils.fr/ | + | *[http://www.collection-appareils.fr/x/html/page_standard.php?id_appareil=10475 Bronica ETR si] at [http://www.collection-appareils.fr/general/html/francais.php Sylvain Halgand's www.collection-appareils.fr] |
In Japanese: | In Japanese: |
Revision as of 22:37, 16 March 2012
The Bronica ETR is a series of 4.5×6 SLRs made by Bronica.
Contents
ETR series special editions
- 20th Anniversary ETRS (probably 1979): Matching body, 120 back, and AE-II finder in black painted metal with brown leather.[1]
- ETRS Clubman (perhaps 1980 with the introduction of the SQ system): Matching body and AE-II finder in black painted metal, silver Clubman name plates, and lower rubber side panel reminescent of the newly introduced Bronica SQ camera system.
- Safari ETRS (sometime between 1982 and 1988): a surprisingly complete color-coordinated system with ETRS body, 75mm lens, 120 E back, AE-II finder, waist-level finder, speed grip, professional lens hood, and system case in green (possibly painted) polycarbonate with tan leather and accents. [2]
- “William Fox Talbot the 150th Anniversary Special Edition” ETRSi (1990): Standard black polycarbonate ETRSi body with gold plaque below the shutter speed dial. Also came with Billingham Talbot 150 Year Hard Equipment Case (Holds Body, 2 Backs, 3 Lenses, Flash, Finder, and Motor Grip)
- “300,000 ETR Series Cameras Sold” ETRSi (Chrome Limited Edition, 1996): Matching body and 120 back in silver chrome polycarbonate with fine-grained black leather.[3]
- 40th Anniversary Limited Edition ETRSi (1999): Matching body, 75mm PE Lens, 120 Ei back, AE-III Finder, and Speed Grip all in champagne chrome polycarbonate (plastic) with grey leatherette— even the lens barrel is polycarbonate.
Chrome bodies and accessories
Throughout the life of the ETR line Bronica kept producing chrome bodies and backs, starting from the introduction in 1976. They made chrome ETR and ETRS bodies and chrome 120, 220, and 70mm backs probably until 1981 when they switched from metal body panels to polycarbonate. Then in 1996 they produced the Limited Edition chrome ETR-Si body and matching chrome Ei 120 back. The original chrome ETR and ETRS bodies came with chrome winding cranks, while the 1996 Limited ETRSi came with a standard black crank. Also the ETR and ETRS backs had chrome shells/frames and chrome inserts, while the 1996 chrome 120 backs had a standard black painted shell with a chrome insert.
An ETR manual that shows the original chrome components of the system is available online.[4]
There were never any chrome metal finders, though most of the pre-1981 finders seem to have been black painted metal just like the standard black bodies.
Confusingly, there was a later, champagne chrome colored polycarbonate 40th Anniversary edition that did have its own matching AE-III Finder, Speed Grip, and 75mm lens. This set uses grey instead of black leatherette. It is very pretty (and Bronica used its great original type and logo from the 60s)-- but it does not match any previous silver chrome components.
A Bronica ETRS ("plastic" 1982 modification) image by Jack Whitaker |
Original ETR and ETRS chrome bodies, backs, and cranks all look good and work well together with the other standard black components and the 1996 chrome Special Edition.[5]
One can replace the black plastic ME and MLU levers and the whole winder cover of the 1996 edition with metal chrome versions scavenged from any black metal paint ETR or early ETRS parts bodies. Doing so makes a thoroughly modern ETRSi body reminiscent of the Bronica S and S2 series -- and more importantly gives a very rugged, compact, modern medium format body.
Notes
- ↑ See this page of Koh's Camera website.
- ↑ See this page of Koh's Camera website.
- ↑ See this page, this page, and this page in Raymond Bradlau's pbase Camera gallery.
- ↑ Here at butkus.org.
- ↑ See Raymond Bradlau's photos referenced above for a pleasant example of mixing the 1996 chrome ETRSi with the older components.
Bibliography
- Lewis, Gordon, ed. The History of the Japanese Camera. Rochester, N.Y.: George Eastman House, International Museum of Photography & Film, 1991. ISBN 0-935398-17-1 (paper), 0-935398-16-3 (hard). P. 150.
- McKeown, James M. and Joan C. McKeown's Price Guide to Antique and Classic Cameras, 12th Edition, 2005-2006. USA, Centennial Photo Service, 2004. ISBN 0-931838-40-1 (hardcover). ISBN 0-931838-41-X (softcover). Pp. 159–62.
Links
General links
In English:
- Bronica Users Group (BUG) at the Yahoo Groups site
- Bronica Learning Center: ETR guide at the Tamron official website
- ETRSi Product Overview at the Tamron official website
- ETRSi Specifications and PE Lens Series Information at the Tamron Japan official website
- Bronica Discontinued Products List at the Tamron Japan official website
- Bronica ETR at medfmt
- Bronica ETRS/Si at medfmt
- Excel spreadsheet listing complete ETR lens production from 1976 - 2004 at Jonathan Taylor's personal webspace.
- Bronica ETR website at myphotoweb.com (also in Dutch)
In Spanish:
In French :
In Japanese:
User manuals
- Bronica manuals at the Tamron official website, including the ETRS and ETRSi
- Bronica ETR manual and Bronica ETRS / ETRC manual at butkus.org