Roico

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The Roico (ロイコ) is a 4×4cm format camera, made by Riken Kōgaku Kōgyō (today Ricoh) from 1940 or 1941. The Roico name is the acronym of Riken Optical Industry Co.,[1] and the camera was certainly produced in Riken's Ōji plant.[2] At about the same time, a sub-company of Riken called Asahi Kōgaku Kōgyō was making the Letix, another 4×4 camera.

Description

The Roico has a metal body, said to be based on the body of the Gokoku and Ricohl 3×4 camera,[3] without the focal plane shutter and adapted for the larger 4×4 exposure format. It seems that the Molby camera by Kuribayashi also shares the same body.

The lens and shutter assembly is mounted on a collapsible helical with a focusing tab. There is a tubular optical finder in the middle of the top plate and an accessory shoe at the left end. The name ROICO is engraved between the two.

The advance knob is at the top right and is mounted on a small housing containing an automatic stop advance device and an exposure counter. (This device was necessary because at the time, the film paper backing was not marked for 4×4cm pictures.) The frame counter is reset by a rotating button which looks like a body release (certainly on purpose). The release lever itself is on the shutter housing.

The back is removed together with the bottom plate for film loading. It contains a single red window on the left, protected by a cover retracted via a thumbwheel. The red window is used to set the position of the first exposure. The back is locked by rotating knobs at both ends of the bottom plate, with O and L positions. The serial number is engraved in the left hand knob. There is a red window in the back, apparently protected by a rotating cover.

All the Roico models have a Roico Anastigmat 60mm f/3.5 lens unless noted. It is a three-element lens made by Nippon Kōsokki.[4]

Evolution

Original Roico

The Roico camera was perhaps planned after the Gokoku proved unreliable, to make use of the dies or body castings. It is mentioned as a project in advertisements for the Olympic Four in the March and April 1940 issues of Asahi Camera.[5] The camera is announced as having a 60/3.5 lens, T, B, 5–250 shutter speeds, automatic stop film advance, helical unit-focusing and a parallax correcting viewfinder. The version with parallax correcting finder might correspond to the "Roico I", but that feature was certainly abandoned before the camera went into production.

Early Roico II

The camera appears in the list of set prices compiled in October 1940 and published in January 1941, under the names "Roico II" (¥95) and "Roico III" (¥125), with no further details.[6] In an advertisement in the January 1941 issue of Asahi Camera, the Roico II is listed with a 60/3.5 lens and T, B, 5–250 shutter speeds.[7] The lens name Roico Anastigmat and the price of ¥95 are given in the advertisement published the following month in the same magazine.[8]

Actual examples have been observed in that configuration, with an everset shutter giving 5–250, B, T speeds, corresponding to the early Roico II.[9]

Late Roico II and Roico III

The Roico II and Roico III are mentioned in the April 1943 government inquiry on Japanese camera production.[10] On both models, the lens is a three-element Roico 60/3.5 made by Nippon Kōsokki. The Roico II was listed with a Roico shutter giving 5–200, T, B speeds and the Roico III with an RKK shutter giving 1–200, T, B speeds.

Actual examples have been observed with an everset shutter giving 5–200, B, T speeds, corresponding to the late Roico II.[11] The exposure counter reset button differs from the early production.

One example is known of the Roico III, with a setting shutter giving T, B, 1–300 speeds and engraved RKK at the bottom of the speed rim.[12]

The example pictured above has a Kraft-Anastigmat 5cm f/3.5 lens mounted on a shutter with setting lever giving B, 1–300 or perhaps B, 1–500 speeds (the top speed is barely legible).[13] This lens was originally made by Takahashi for the Kraft, a camera made by Echt. Conversely one Kraft camera is known with a Roico Anastigmat 50mm f/4.5 lens, indicating that there were reciprocal supply agreements between Echt and Riken (see also the discussion on the Kraft and Letix).

Late production examples also exist with an NKS shutter with setting lever, giving T, B, 1–200 speeds. They have ROICO at the bottom of the shutter plate. Some have NKS at the base of the speed rim, whereas others have NKS–TOKIO.[14]

Total production

The lens numbers observed go from 11813 to 17486, for a sequence perhaps starting at 10000. The Roico 60mm f/3.5 lens was probably used on this camera only, and we can thus give a rough estimate of about 8,000 examples of the Roico.

Rangefinder conversions

The Cyclon coupled rangefinder conversion offered in 1943 and 1944 for the Gelto was also available for the Roico.[15] The conversion is described in detail in this section of the Gelto page. It is not known if the earlier conversion with separate range- and viewfinder, called Suzuki coupled device, was offered for this camera. No surviving example of the Roico has been observed with a rangefinder conversion.

Notes

  1. According to this page of the Ricoh official website.
  2. Arimura, p.6 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.14, says this of the Gokoku, which has a similar body.
  3. "Senzen no rikō kamera – hoi", p.21 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.14, and this page of the Ricoh website.
  4. "Kokusan shashinki no genjōchōsa" ("Inquiry into Japanese cameras"), lens item K7.
  5. Advertisements reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, pp.64 and 104.
  6. "Kokusan shashinki no kōtei kakaku", type 1, sections 9 and 10.
  7. Advertisement reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p.65.
  8. Advertisement reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, p.104.
  9. Examples pictured in this article by David Silver (lens no.11813) and in this page and this page at Asacame (lens no.12125).
  10. "Kokusan shashinki no genjōchōsa" ("Inquiry into Japanese cameras"), items 146–7.
  11. One example is pictured in Sugiyama, item 3049 and "Senzen no rikō kamera – hoi", p.21 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.14 (lens no.13150). Others are pictured in this page (lens number is probably 13433) and this page (lens no.13674) of the AJCC. Other have been observed in online auctions (lens no.15392 and 15738).
  12. Example pictured in Sugiyama, item 3050 and "Senzen no rikō kamera – hoi", p.21 of Kurashikku Kamera Senka no.14 (lens no.16528).
  13. Example pictured in this page, body no.12552. The example was repaired at some time: two screws are missing from the front of the top plate.
  14. NKS: example observed in an online auction (lens no.14235). NKS–TOKIO: example pictured in McKeown, p.833 (lens no.17486), and example observed in an online auction (body no.17223, lens no.17422).
  15. Advertisements dated July 1943 and May 1944 reproduced in Kokusan kamera no rekishi, pp.111–2.

Bibliography

Links

In English:

In Japanese:


Asahi Bussan and Riken prewar and wartime cameras (edit)
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Vest Adler | Gokoku | Semi Kinsi | Letix | Olympic | New Olympic | Regal Olympic | Semi Olympic | Super Olympic | Vest Olympic | Riken No.1 | Ricohl | Roico | Seica | Zessan
folders pseudo TLR TLR
Semi Adler | Adler III | Adler A | Adler B | Adler C | Adler Four | Adler Six | Gaica | Heil | Kinsi Chukon Ref Ricohflex | Ricohflex B