Difference between revisions of "Norita"

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* [[Rittreck 6×6 and Norita 66|Norita 66 and Graflex Norita]] 6×6cm SLR, 1972
 
* [[Rittreck 6×6 and Norita 66|Norita 66 and Graflex Norita]] 6×6cm SLR, 1972
 
* Rittron lenses for the [[Rittreck 6×6 and Norita 66|Rittreck 6×6]]
 
* Rittron lenses for the [[Rittreck 6×6 and Norita 66|Rittreck 6×6]]
* Noritar lenses for the [[Rittreck 6×6 and Norita 66|Norita 66]]
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* Noritar lenses for the [[Rittreck 6×6 and Norita 66|Norita 66]]<REF>[http://www003.upp.so-net.ne.jp/Topconclub/Norita1.htm Norita Club Page 1], at the Topcon Club.</REF>
 
* Noritar lenses for the [[Graflex XL]]
 
* Noritar lenses for the [[Graflex XL]]
 
* some Zenzanon lenses for [[Bronica]], including a 150mm<REF name="Norita Club 2"/>
 
* some Zenzanon lenses for [[Bronica]], including a 150mm<REF name="Norita Club 2"/>
* lenses for 35mm cameras<REF>[http://www003.upp.so-net.ne.jp/Topconclub/Norita1.htm Norita Club Page 1], at the Topcon Club.</REF>
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===Noritar Lenses for 35mm SLRs===
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* Norita Kogaku Noritar 135mm f/1.4 preset T mount
 +
* Norita Noritar 250mm f/4.5 preset T mount (said to be identical to the Vivitar 250mm f/4.5 preset)<ref>[http://forum.mflenses.com/the-rare-vivitar-250mm-f-4-5-pre-set-lens-t32587,start,30.html MFlenses forum: The rare Vivitar 250mm f/4.5 Pre-Set Lens]</ref>
  
 
== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==

Revision as of 23:39, 27 March 2012

Norita Kōgaku (ノリタ光学) was a Japanese lens and camera maker. It was founded in 1951 by Norita Toshio (車田利夫),[1] a former employee of Tōkyō Kōgaku.[2] The company worked as a subcontractor for other companies, starting with lenses for binoculars and moving via binocular prisms to pentaprisms for SLR cameras including the Rittreck 6×6 of Musashino.[1]

After some time, the company started making lenses too, notably supplying the Rittron lenses sold by Musashino for the Rittreck 6×6[1] and at least some of the Zenzanon lenses sold by Bronica.[2][3] One of the lens designers was Maruyama Shūji (丸山修治), another former employee of Tōkyō Kōgaku, who previously worked on the postwar Simlar 5cm f/0.7.[4]

In 1969,[1] the Musashino company went bankrupt, and Norita took over the machine tools and some of the staff from production of the Rittreck 6×6, which was modified and rebadged Norita 66.[1] The new camera was produced for export from 1971,[5] and released on the Japanese market in 1972.[6] The company entered distribution agreements with Graflex (a division of Singer), which sold the camera in the United States as the Graflex Norita.

In 1976, the company stopped the production of cameras and camera-related products, but remained in business, making projection lenses and other products.[7] In 1994 Hagiya Takeshi wrote that the Norita products his readers were most likely to encounter were the three (RGB) lenses for large television projectors.[7]

Norita became a dependent company of Enplas in 2000 and was renamed Enplas Optics (エンプラスオプティクス) in 2001, but shut its doors in 2005.[2]

Products

Noritar Lenses for 35mm SLRs

  • Norita Kogaku Noritar 135mm f/1.4 preset T mount
  • Norita Noritar 250mm f/4.5 preset T mount (said to be identical to the Vivitar 250mm f/4.5 preset)[9]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Hagiya, p.82.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Norita Kōgaku in the Japanese Wikipedia.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Norita Club page 2, at the Topcon Club.
  4. This page of the Topcon Club.
  5. Hagiya, pp.82 and 90.
  6. Hagiya, p.87, and Norita Club page 1, at the Topcon Club.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Hagiya, p.90.
  8. Norita Club Page 1, at the Topcon Club.
  9. MFlenses forum: The rare Vivitar 250mm f/4.5 Pre-Set Lens

Sources

Links

In Japanese with some English:

In Japanese: