Difference between revisions of "Mamiya/Sekor Auto XTL"

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The '''[[Mamiya]]/Sekor Auto XTL''', is a automatic exposure 35mm SLR introduced in April 1971.
 
The '''[[Mamiya]]/Sekor Auto XTL''', is a automatic exposure 35mm SLR introduced in April 1971.
  
It was unquestionably the most advanced 35mm SLR camera of its day. It was planned to have a motorized drive for continuous-action photography, but few drives were produced beyond the prototype stage and these are extremely rare today.
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At this time, Mamiya was known for their [[42mm screw lenses | M42-mount]] cameras in the [[Mamiya/Sekor TL/DTL series | DTL series]]. These were distinctive for their switchable spot or averaging meter pattern, but were lower-priced models still relying on stopdown metering.  
  
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The Auto XTL was a dramatically more ambitious cameraa, launching a new bayonet mount which enabled [[open-aperture metering]] and shutter priority autoexposure. Switchable metering patterns continued. The XTL was planned to have a motorized drive for continuous-action photography, but few drives were produced beyond the prototype stage and these are extremely rare today.
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Mamiya offered mount adapters which permitted many older M42 lenses to be attached, although these could only use stopdown, match-needle, manual metering.
  
 
== Links ==
 
== Links ==

Revision as of 01:54, 21 February 2023

The Mamiya/Sekor Auto XTL, is a automatic exposure 35mm SLR introduced in April 1971.

At this time, Mamiya was known for their M42-mount cameras in the DTL series. These were distinctive for their switchable spot or averaging meter pattern, but were lower-priced models still relying on stopdown metering.

The Auto XTL was a dramatically more ambitious cameraa, launching a new bayonet mount which enabled open-aperture metering and shutter priority autoexposure. Switchable metering patterns continued. The XTL was planned to have a motorized drive for continuous-action photography, but few drives were produced beyond the prototype stage and these are extremely rare today.

Mamiya offered mount adapters which permitted many older M42 lenses to be attached, although these could only use stopdown, match-needle, manual metering.

Links