Difference between revisions of "Foth-Flex"

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Revision as of 17:58, 15 September 2010

The Foth-Flex is a medium format TLR camera produced by Foth in Germany in 1935. It has a number of unusual features for a TLR. It is one of the very few[1] TLR to use a focal plane shutter.

The Foth-Flex has two Foth Anastigmat 75/3.5 lenses. They take only push-on filters. The Foth-Flex has a focal plane cloth shutter with speeds from B, 1–1/500s. It takes 6×6 pictures on 120 film. It has a curious (shove-under) accessory shoe and no flash synchronization.

Operation

The Foth-Flex is focused by a wheel on the left side of the camera. Aperture is set by a lever under the taking lens. The shutter is operated on the right side of the camera: a lever to set it and a button to fire it. A separate wheel is used to andvance the film. The last unusual feature of the Foth-Flex is the back which is hinged in on two sides. The two parts are held together by a button on the lower back. There's no framecounter, but there's a ruby window in the bottom.

Variations

The earlier models (I) were marked Foth on the waist-level finder. Later models (II) had an Albada sports finder integrated in the waist level finder and had a Foth-Flex nameplate under the taking lens. The technical difference between the models I and II was the introduction of the slow speeds (up to 2s). From 1938 onwards,[2] the focusing wheel was replaced by a lever on the other side of the camera. These models have an nameplate on the conventional spot above the viewing lens. Models with Foth Anastigmat 75/2.5 lenses are known.[3]

Notes

  1. The 1936 Mentorett is another one; McKeown 10th edition p.220.
  2. McKeown 10th edition, p.200.
  3. McKeown 10th edition, p.200.

Links

In English: