Difference between revisions of "Minolta Autopak 700"

From Camera-wiki.org
Jump to: navigation, search
m
m (Links)
Line 13: Line 13:
 
*[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bdIm8EQEImc Autopak 700] on YouTube (Spanish)
 
*[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bdIm8EQEImc Autopak 700] on YouTube (Spanish)
 
*[http://progsch.net/mediawiki2/index.php?title=Autopak_700 Autopak 700] in [http://progsch.net/mediawiki2/index.php?title=Hauptseite Minowiki]  (German)
 
*[http://progsch.net/mediawiki2/index.php?title=Autopak_700 Autopak 700] in [http://progsch.net/mediawiki2/index.php?title=Hauptseite Minowiki]  (German)
*[http://whystoptime.wordpress.com/2009/02/24/all-my-cameras-4-minolta-autopak-700/ Review] (English)
+
*[http://whystoptime.wordpress.com/2009/02/24/all-my-cameras-4-minolta-autopak-700/ Review] at [https://whystoptime.wordpress.com/ Why Stop Time] (English)
  
 
[[Category:Japanese 126 film]]
 
[[Category:Japanese 126 film]]
 
[[Category:Japanese rangefinder]]
 
[[Category:Japanese rangefinder]]
 
[[Category:Minolta|Autopak 700]]
 
[[Category:Minolta|Autopak 700]]

Revision as of 05:36, 13 April 2016

The Minolta Autopak was introduced by Minolta in 1966. It is a rare collector's item since it is a rangefinder camera with coupled rangefinder, thus going far beyond the "almost toy camera" approach of the most other cameras for type No. 126 film cassettes. The camera has a CdS-controlled exposure program which can set aperture/ahutter-speed automatically between f2.8 1/30 sec and f22 1/250 sec. Shutter and aperture automatics can be overridden by setting aperture and/or exposure time manually. The camera has a hot shoe. The lens is a 4-element Rokkor 1:2.8/38mm. The solid metal camera weighs 540 g. The bright-frame finder shows the meter's instrument's needle pinpointing on the measured EV-value.

Links