Hasselblad 1600 F

From Camera-wiki.org
Revision as of 12:56, 26 February 2009 by Jan (talk | contribs) (edit txt)
Jump to: navigation, search

The Hasselblad 1600F camera was introduced in New York in October 1948. Production commenced in 1949, but very few were made the first years due to technical difficulties. It was manufactured until 1953, when the model 1000F with a modefied shutter replaced it.

The camera is a 6×6 cm format focal-plane shutter SLR camera. It was a revolutionary concept at the time of introduction, being of a modular design having interchangeable lens, viewfinder and film magazine. The shutter was made of corrugated stainless steel foil which was light and durable enough to withstand the high acceleration forces of this fast shutter.

  • The First ~269 cameras were known simply as "Hasselblad Camera". These are extremely rare since 153 of them were destroyed because of an internal flaw.
  • Starting 1950 these cameras were renamed to 1600F ("1600" for the highest shutter speed 1/1600s and "F" for "focal plane"). Currently, functional cameras are also somewhat rare on the market because of the fragile shutter.

The Hasselblad camera was initially sold with the Kodak Ektar 2.8/80mm or the Ektar 3.5/135mm lens supplied by Kodak and fitted for the US market at arrival, but later also Zeiss lenses became available.




Links

Hasselblad 1600F at Medium Format Photography Megasite [1]
Hasselblad 1600F Recent Auction Prices at CollectiBlend.com [2]