Difference between revisions of "Rectus"
Rebollo fr (talk | contribs) (→Cameras equipped with a Rectus shutter: and another) |
Rebollo fr (talk | contribs) (→Cameras equipped with a Rectus shutter: added the Condor 35mm) |
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These lists are incomplete. That a particular model is listed here should not be taken to mean that all examples were fitted with this model of shutter. | These lists are incomplete. That a particular model is listed here should not be taken to mean that all examples were fitted with this model of shutter. | ||
+ | * [[Condor (35mm)]] (Rectus-MX, B, 1–500) | ||
* [[Elbow flex]] (B-1-300 reported) | * [[Elbow flex]] (B-1-300 reported) | ||
* [[Fodorflex]] | * [[Fodorflex]] |
Revision as of 08:48, 13 June 2006
Rectus was the name of a shutter found on some Japanese cameras from the 1950s. It existed at least in two variants, with B-1-200 and B-1-300 speeds. According to a post in the Classic Camera Repair Forum it was a copy of the Prontor II. According to this page at Japan Family Camera, it was made by a company called Fuji Seimitsu (富士精密), together with a shutter called Ceres. (Today there is a company called Fuji Seimitsu, but its website says that it was founded in 1962.)
Cameras equipped with a Rectus shutter
These lists are incomplete. That a particular model is listed here should not be taken to mean that all examples were fitted with this model of shutter.
- Condor (35mm) (Rectus-MX, B, 1–500)
- Elbow flex (B-1-300 reported)
- Fodorflex
- Fujica Six IICR
- Mine Six and Mine Six IIF (B-1-200)
- Neoca 2S
- Primoflex
- Prince Junior (unsure, B-1-300 reported)
Cameras equipped with a Ceres shutter
- Elbow flex (B-1-300)
- Prince Junior (B-1-300)