Difference between revisions of "Romax plate folder"

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{{Japanese plate}}
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{{Japanese plate folding bed}}
The '''Romax''' is a Japanese 6.5×9cm plate folder, about which little is known. It is attributed to [[Petri|Kuribayashi]] by Baird, for an unknown reason.<REF> Baird, pp.15 and 59. </REF> It was most certainly distributed by [[Misuzu Shōkai]], which previously distributed a [[Nifca and Molta plate folders|Lomax]], name variant of the [[Nifca and Molta plate folders|Sirius]] by [[Minolta|Molta]] &mdash; "Lomax" and "Romax" are alternate spellings of the same Japanese name ロマックス (''Romakkusu'').
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The '''Romax''' is a Japanese 6.5×9cm plate folder, about which little is known, and whose mere existence is dubious. The company [[Misuzu Shōkai]] is known to have distributed a [[Nifca and Molta plate folders|Lomax]], name variant of the [[Nifca and Molta plate folders|Sirius]] by [[Minolta|Molta]]. "Lomax" and "Romax" are alternate spellings of the same Japanese name ロマックス (''Romakkusu''), and all the mentions of a "Romax" might originate in a confusion with this "Lomax" camera. The name "Romax" was used in the early 1940s for an unrelated 6×6 folder too, see [[Romax (6×6)]].
  
Some sources say that the Romax was released in 1934.<REF> Baird, p.59; {{McKeown}}, p.576. Lewis, p.48, gives the Romax in a list of cameras released in 1933 and 1934. </REF> The camera was recently listed in the official chronology of Misuzu Shōkai as released in 1938, but this was probably a mistake.<REF> [http://web.archive.org/web/20040611010640/www.misuzu.gr.jp/enkaku.htm Chronology] of the Misuzu official website (web archive version Sep 24, 2004). </REF>
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== Romax reported in Baird and {{MK}} ==
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The most detailed source on the "Romax" is Baird's book on [[Petri|Kuribayashi]] cameras, where the camera is attributed to that company for an unknown reason.<REF> Baird, pp.15 and 59. </REF> Baird reports that the camera was offered in 1934 with Radionar or Trinar lenses in f/6.3 or f/4.5 aperture.<REF> Baird, p.59. </REF>
  
Baird reports that the camera was offered with Radionar or Trinar lenses in f/6.3 or f/4.5 aperture.<REF> Baird, p.59. </REF> The only surviving example observed so far is pictured in the same source.<REF> Picture in Baird, p.59, reproduced in {{McKeown}}, p.576. </REF> It has a die-cast metal body, double extension bellows driven by a small wheel on the photographer's right, a distance scale on the left and vertical and horizontal movement ability. It visibly had a [[brilliant finder]] and wireframe finder, which are now missing. Its shutter is a dial-set [[Vario]] (25, 50, 100, B, T) and its lens is a Radionar f/4.5. However the lens front cell rotates for focusing and has a distance scale engraved on the rim. Front-cell focusing lenses are normally not mounted on a plate folder, which has its own focusing device, and we can suspect that the lens and shutter assembly is not original. Another anomaly is that Baird describes the Romax as a "basic, inexpensive model" in the text, whereas the pictured camera has expensive features such as double extension bellows and movements in two directions. The name Romax is not directly visible on the pictured example, and pictures were perhaps swapped by mistake.
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This source shows one picture of a surviving camera, but the camera name is not visible.<REF> Picture in Baird, p.59. </REF> The pictured camera has a die-cast metal body, double extension bellows driven by a small wheel on the photographer's right, a distance scale on the left and vertical and horizontal movement ability. There are traces of a missing [[brilliant finder]] and wireframe finder.
  
{{McKeown}} shows the same picture and reports the camera with the following lens and shutter combinations:<REF> {{McKeown}}, p.576. </REF>
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The lens is a Radionar f/4.5 and the shutter is a dial-set [[Vario]] (25, 50, 100, B, T). The lens has a rotating front cell and a distance scale engraved on the rim; front-cell focusing lenses are normally not mounted on a plate folder, which has its own focusing device, and the lens and shutter unit is certainly not original.
 +
 
 +
The picture does not fit the text well: the camera is described as a "basic, inexpensive model" in the text, whereas the pictured camera has expensive features such as double extension bellows and rise and cross movements.
 +
 
 +
The exact same picture is reproduced in {{MK}}.<REF> {{MK}}, p.576. </REF> The lens and shutter combination is not mentioned in the text, perhaps because of doubts on its authenticity, and the following combinations are reported instead:<REF> {{MK}}, p.576. </REF>
 
* Trinar f/6.3 (by [[Rodenstock]]), [[Vario]];
 
* Trinar f/6.3 (by [[Rodenstock]]), [[Vario]];
 
* Radionar f/4.5 (by [[Schneider]]), [[Compur]];
 
* Radionar f/4.5 (by [[Schneider]]), [[Compur]];
 
* State Anastigmat f/4.5 (by [[Tōkyō Kōgaku]]), [[Magna]].
 
* State Anastigmat f/4.5 (by [[Tōkyō Kōgaku]]), [[Magna]].
The pictured combination is not mentioned in the text, perhaps because of the doubts on its authenticity exposed above.
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== Other available sources ==
 +
A "Romax" camera appears in Lewis in a list of Japanese plate cameras released in 1933 and 1934.<REF> Lewis, p.48. </REF> This source is not the most reliable for Roman spellings, and this camera might correspond to the [[Nifca and Molta plate folders|Lomax]] instead.
 +
 
 +
Finally, a "Romax" or "Lomax" (ロマックス) was recently listed in the official chronology of [[Misuzu Shōkai]] as released in 1938.<REF> [http://web.archive.org/web/20040611010640/www.misuzu.gr.jp/enkaku.htm Chronology] of the Misuzu official website (web archive version Sep 24, 2004, in Shift-JIS encoding). </REF> The date was certainly a mistake, and the name itself was given in ''katakana'' script only.
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== Other camera maybe corresponding to a Romax ==
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One 6.5×9cm plate folder is presented as a [[Mikuni]] in [http://mutohide.net/reconst/amigo-1.htm this page at Handmade and Classic Camera]. It has an [[Amigo]]-Anastigmat 10.5cm f/4.5 and a rim-set [[Compur]] shutter. It is not known if the identification as a Mikuni is confirmed by a marking on the camera itself or if this is a mere guess. The body significantly differs from the illustrations of a [[Mikuni]] found in original advertisements (see the corresponding page), and it is very similar to the camera pictured in Baird and {{MK}} as a "Romax": it has the same folding struts and focusing rails, and the front standard has strong similarities.<REF> "Romax" pictured in Baird, p.59, and in {{MK}}, p.576. </REF>
  
 
== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==
Line 23: Line 35:
 
== Links ==
 
== Links ==
 
In Japanese:
 
In Japanese:
 +
* [http://mutohide.net/reconst/amigo-1.htm Mikuni or Romax camera with Amigo lens and Compur shutter], at [http://mutohide.net/ Handmade and Classic Camera]
 
* A web archive version (Sep 24, 2004) of the [http://web.archive.org/web/20040611010640/www.misuzu.gr.jp/enkaku.htm chronology] of the [http://web.archive.org/web/20040924055607/http://www.misuzu.gr.jp/ Misuzu Shōkai corporate site], which is now dead. (If the text is garbled rather than Japanese, switch the encoding to Shift-JIS.)
 
* A web archive version (Sep 24, 2004) of the [http://web.archive.org/web/20040611010640/www.misuzu.gr.jp/enkaku.htm chronology] of the [http://web.archive.org/web/20040924055607/http://www.misuzu.gr.jp/ Misuzu Shōkai corporate site], which is now dead. (If the text is garbled rather than Japanese, switch the encoding to Shift-JIS.)
  

Latest revision as of 12:06, 25 May 2008

Japanese plate cameras, folding bed (edit)
No.0 (4×5cm) Alpha | Sweet | Pony Sweet | Taishō-shiki
atom (4.5×6cm) Monarch | Need | Palma
meishi (5.5×8cm) Eagle | Idea A | Idea B | Idea Snap | Idea No.1 | Iris | Lily (horizontal) | Pearl No.3 | Special Camera | Venis | X
daimeishi (6.5×9cm) Apollo | Arcadia | Crite | Special East | Eaton | Elliotte | First | First Etui | Gold | Happy | Hope | Idea No.1 | Idea (metal) | Kinka | Kokka | Lily (horizontal) | Lily (metal) | Tropical Lily | Lloyd | Lomax | Masnette | Mikuni | Need | Nifca Klapp | Nifca Sport | Ohca | Palma | Peter | Prince | Prince Peerless | Proud | Romax | Rosen | Rubies | Sirius | Sun | Super | Tokiwa | Venus | Weha Idea | Weha Light
tefuda (8×10.5cm) Eagle | Idea A | Idea B | Idea No.1 | Idea (metal) | Iris | Lily (original) | Lily (horizontal) | Lily (metal) | Palma | Pearl No.3, No.4 | Minimum Pearl | Special Pearl | Sakura Palace | Sakura Pocket Prano | Star | Tokiwa | Weha
nimaigake (8×12cm) Eagle | Idea | Idea Binocular | Sakura Prano | Sakura Binocular Prano | Star Premo
hagaki (8×14cm) Eagle | Noble | Pearl No.3, No.4 | Star
kabine (12×16.5cm) Idea | Noble | Sakura Prano | Star Premo
Japanese plate film: monocular, box, strut-folding and SLR ->
3×4 and 4×4, 4×5 and 4×6.5, 4.5×6, 6×6 and 6×9 ->

The Romax is a Japanese 6.5×9cm plate folder, about which little is known, and whose mere existence is dubious. The company Misuzu Shōkai is known to have distributed a Lomax, name variant of the Sirius by Molta. "Lomax" and "Romax" are alternate spellings of the same Japanese name ロマックス (Romakkusu), and all the mentions of a "Romax" might originate in a confusion with this "Lomax" camera. The name "Romax" was used in the early 1940s for an unrelated 6×6 folder too, see Romax (6×6).

Romax reported in Baird and McKeown

The most detailed source on the "Romax" is Baird's book on Kuribayashi cameras, where the camera is attributed to that company for an unknown reason.[1] Baird reports that the camera was offered in 1934 with Radionar or Trinar lenses in f/6.3 or f/4.5 aperture.[2]

This source shows one picture of a surviving camera, but the camera name is not visible.[3] The pictured camera has a die-cast metal body, double extension bellows driven by a small wheel on the photographer's right, a distance scale on the left and vertical and horizontal movement ability. There are traces of a missing brilliant finder and wireframe finder.

The lens is a Radionar f/4.5 and the shutter is a dial-set Vario (25, 50, 100, B, T). The lens has a rotating front cell and a distance scale engraved on the rim; front-cell focusing lenses are normally not mounted on a plate folder, which has its own focusing device, and the lens and shutter unit is certainly not original.

The picture does not fit the text well: the camera is described as a "basic, inexpensive model" in the text, whereas the pictured camera has expensive features such as double extension bellows and rise and cross movements.

The exact same picture is reproduced in McKeown.[4] The lens and shutter combination is not mentioned in the text, perhaps because of doubts on its authenticity, and the following combinations are reported instead:[5]

Other available sources

A "Romax" camera appears in Lewis in a list of Japanese plate cameras released in 1933 and 1934.[6] This source is not the most reliable for Roman spellings, and this camera might correspond to the Lomax instead.

Finally, a "Romax" or "Lomax" (ロマックス) was recently listed in the official chronology of Misuzu Shōkai as released in 1938.[7] The date was certainly a mistake, and the name itself was given in katakana script only.

Other camera maybe corresponding to a Romax

One 6.5×9cm plate folder is presented as a Mikuni in this page at Handmade and Classic Camera. It has an Amigo-Anastigmat 10.5cm f/4.5 and a rim-set Compur shutter. It is not known if the identification as a Mikuni is confirmed by a marking on the camera itself or if this is a mere guess. The body significantly differs from the illustrations of a Mikuni found in original advertisements (see the corresponding page), and it is very similar to the camera pictured in Baird and McKeown as a "Romax": it has the same folding struts and focusing rails, and the front standard has strong similarities.[8]

Notes

  1. Baird, pp.15 and 59.
  2. Baird, p.59.
  3. Picture in Baird, p.59.
  4. McKeown, p.576.
  5. McKeown, p.576.
  6. Lewis, p.48.
  7. Chronology of the Misuzu official website (web archive version Sep 24, 2004, in Shift-JIS encoding).
  8. "Romax" pictured in Baird, p.59, and in McKeown, p.576.

Bibliography

The Romax is not listed in Sugiyama.

Links

In Japanese:


Kuribayashi prewar and wartime cameras (edit)
rollfilm folders
Eagle | Speed Pocket | First Roll | First Center | Semi First | First Six | Baby Semi First | Semi Rotte | Hokoku | Mizuho
plate folders rigid SLR TLR unknown
Mikuni | First | First Etui | Kokka | Romax | Tokiwa Molby Speed Reflex First Reflex Baby First