Difference between revisions of "Paxette electromatic"
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The later version Electromatic III had a better lens and shutter combination, with a good set of selectable speed and aperture settings and coupled meter visible through the finder. The Electromatic IA had interchangable lenses. | The later version Electromatic III had a better lens and shutter combination, with a good set of selectable speed and aperture settings and coupled meter visible through the finder. The Electromatic IA had interchangable lenses. | ||
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|image_text= 1st Paxette electromatic, version with Katagon lens | |image_text= 1st Paxette electromatic, version with Katagon lens | ||
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+ | This generation of the Paxette was unusual in featuring lever-rewind as well as lever advance. | ||
+ | <!-- need a photo of the back to show this; you can see the edge of the rewind lever in the frontal photo (and it's shown in page 3 of the manual) --> | ||
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==Links== | ==Links== |
Revision as of 01:02, 28 May 2008
In 1959 the Braun Paxette electromatic was advertised as the world's first fully automatic 35mm camera. Its selenium meter controlled the aperture and gave a red/green light sufficiency signal in the viewfinder. But other automatic functions were missing. Instead, the focusing of the Ennagon 1:5.6/40mm lens was fixed, and it had only the single shutter speed 1/40 sec. Film speed had to be selected manually to obtain proper exposure by the aperture system.
The later version Electromatic III had a better lens and shutter combination, with a good set of selectable speed and aperture settings and coupled meter visible through the finder. The Electromatic IA had interchangable lenses.
1st Paxette electromatic, version with Katagon lens |
This generation of the Paxette was unusual in featuring lever-rewind as well as lever advance.