Difference between revisions of "Gotō"
Rebollo fr (talk | contribs) (a bit more) |
Rebollo fr (talk | contribs) (→Links: +1) |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
* [http://www.goto.co.jp/company/about.html Company outline] at the [http://www.goto.co.jp/ Goto Inc. official Japanese website] | * [http://www.goto.co.jp/company/about.html Company outline] at the [http://www.goto.co.jp/ Goto Inc. official Japanese website] | ||
* [http://www3.kcn.ne.jp/~oki-lark/antique.htm Gotō Uranus telescope] at [http://www3.kcn.ne.jp/~oki-lark/ Okiraku-ojisan's telescope website], with some hints about the company history | * [http://www3.kcn.ne.jp/~oki-lark/antique.htm Gotō Uranus telescope] at [http://www3.kcn.ne.jp/~oki-lark/ Okiraku-ojisan's telescope website], with some hints about the company history | ||
+ | * [http://yumarin7.sakura.ne.jp/GOTO.html Gotō astronomical telescopes] and [http://yumarin7.sakura.ne.jp/manmus.html other telescopes] at the [http://ww81.tiki.ne.jp/~yumarin7/ Old Telescope website] | ||
[[Category: Japanese lens makers]] | [[Category: Japanese lens makers]] |
Revision as of 12:01, 5 February 2007
This article is a stub. You can help Camera-wiki.org by expanding it.
K.K. Gotō Kōgaku Kenkyūjo (㈱五藤光学研究所) is a Japanese optical company. It was founded in August 1926[1] by Gotō Seizō (五藤斎三), said to be a former employee of Nippon Kōgaku.[2] It is still (2007) in existence. It is making telescopes and astronomical optical devices since its foundation, and it made the first Japanese planetarium projector in 1958.[3]
The company also made the Triptar[4] lens mounted on the Miyako Six in 1942–3.
Notes
- ↑ Company outline at the Goto Inc. Japanese website.
- ↑ See this page about an old Gotō telescope.
- ↑ Company history at the Goto Inc. official English website.
- ↑ Name inferred from the katakana トリプター.
Links
In English:
In Japanese:
- Company outline at the Goto Inc. official Japanese website
- Gotō Uranus telescope at Okiraku-ojisan's telescope website, with some hints about the company history
- Gotō astronomical telescopes and other telescopes at the Old Telescope website