Difference between revisions of "Olympus Trip (autofocus)"
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1995 | 1995 | ||
* [[Olympus Trip AF 20]] | * [[Olympus Trip AF 20]] | ||
− | * | + | * Olympus Trip AF 21 |
1996 | 1996 | ||
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==Links== | ==Links== | ||
− | + | * [https://web.archive.org/web/20051118163152/http://www.olympus-europa.com/consumer/195_233.htm Late models (2005)] on [https://web.archive.org/web/20051029020504/http://www.olympus-europa.com/consumer/195.htm Olympus-europa.com] (archived) | |
[[Category:Olympus|Trip]] | [[Category:Olympus|Trip]] | ||
[[Category: Japanese 35mm autofocus]] | [[Category: Japanese 35mm autofocus]] | ||
[[Category: O]] | [[Category: O]] |
Latest revision as of 06:06, 19 June 2020
When Olympus discontinued the long-lasting Trip 35 in 1984, it launched a series of cameras that used the 'Trip' name, but were otherwise quite different. Instead of metal bodies, these cameras were mainly plastic. They were cheap to produce and were mass-marketed towards holiday snapshooters who wanted "auto-everything" point and shoot cameras. The series continued into the 21st century with extra big viewfinders (XB) before digital took over and the line was discontinued. Some of these cameras had fixed focus. Listed here are the autofocus models.
1984
1986
Trip AF MD image by Paul Analog (Image rights) |
1990
1992
- Olympus Trip AF S-2
1993
1994
- Olympus Trip AF-1 Mini (QD version followed in 1995)
1995
- Olympus Trip AF 20
- Olympus Trip AF 21
1996
2000
- Olympus Trip XB40 AF (27mm lens)
- Olympus Trip XB41 AF (Same as XB40, but with self-timer)
2002
- Olympus Trip AF 50 (28mm lens)
- Olympus Trip AF 51 (more advanced version of AF 50)
2004
- Olympus Trip AF 60
- Olympus Trip AF 61 (Same as AF60, but with self-timer)
Links
- Late models (2005) on Olympus-europa.com (archived)