Difference between revisions of "Quad Camera"
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*[http://www.collection-appareils.fr/x/html/camera-16038-Avant_Camera%20Quad.html Quad Camera] at collection-appareils.fr [http://www.collection-appareils.fr] | *[http://www.collection-appareils.fr/x/html/camera-16038-Avant_Camera%20Quad.html Quad Camera] at collection-appareils.fr [http://www.collection-appareils.fr] | ||
*[http://www.kamerasammlung.ch/kamera.php?page=&mobile=no&pdf=881&camera=881 further facts] in German at kamerasammlung.ch [http://www.kamerasammlung.ch] | *[http://www.kamerasammlung.ch/kamera.php?page=&mobile=no&pdf=881&camera=881 further facts] in German at kamerasammlung.ch [http://www.kamerasammlung.ch] | ||
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[[Category:Passport cameras]] | [[Category:Passport cameras]] | ||
[[Category:US instant cameras]] | [[Category:US instant cameras]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Q]] |
Latest revision as of 03:41, 27 February 2022
The Quad Camera (Model 32-100 Bs) image by Luis Cozeto (Image rights) |
The Quad Camera was invented as passport photo shooter for the U.S. Government by Avant's engineer Samuel Kitrosser - in 1964 he was mentioned as inventor in U.S. Patent No. USD201225. It is a Disderi type large format camera for shooting passport photos onto sheet film. Disderi type means that its camera chamber is divided into compartments, each over a part of the film sheet and each equipped with an own camera lens. Thus four images can be shot at once onto one film sheet. The aperture-setting rings of the four lenses are simply coupled by a single gearwheel inbetween. A special lens cap allows to shot just one or two images at once instead. The camera has one big leaf shutter - each of its four leaves opens behind one of the four lenses. Thus exposure time range is limited down to 1/50 seconds. The camera has four equal Elgeet 90mm f:6.3 Anastigmat lenses, contacts for attaching a flash gun, an optical viewfinder, and a sheet film holder for Polaroid instant sheet film cartridges (Polaroid film Type 100, 8.5%times;10.5cm). An alternate version was equipped with Ilex Paragon 90mm f6.4 lenses. Some cameras have one little lens cap for each lens instead of the special one for all.
With a weight of 2250g the camera was quite heavy.
Avant also held a patent for a ring flash gun for that camera.
The successor camera, constructed by engineer Kitrosser in 1969, had an inbuilt four-image frame to assure that images with white borders were achieved. He also invented a variant with two different compartment sizes, for achieving two images of each frame size at once on the film sheet.
The Quad Camera (Model 32-100 Bs) image by Luis Cozeto (Image rights) |
The Quad Camera (Model 32-100 Bs) with the special lens hood image by Mark Dalzell (Image rights) |
Links
- Quad Camera at collection-appareils.fr [1]
- further facts in German at kamerasammlung.ch [2]