Romax plate folder

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The Romax is a Japanese 6.5×9cm plate folder, about which little is known. It is attributed to Kuribayashi by Baird, for an unknown reason.[1] It was most certainly distributed by Misuzu Shōkai, which previously 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).

Some sources say that the Romax was released in 1934.[2] The camera was recently listed in the official chronology of Misuzu Shōkai as released in 1938, but this was probably a mistake.[3]

Baird reports that the camera was offered with Radionar or Trinar lenses in f/6.3 or f/4.5 aperture.[4] The only surviving example observed so far is pictured in the same source.[5] 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.

McKeown shows the same picture and reports the camera with the following lens and shutter combinations:[6]

The pictured combination is not mentioned in the text, perhaps because of the doubts on its authenticity exposed above.

Notes

  1. Baird, pp.15 and 59.
  2. Baird, p.59; McKeown, p.576. Lewis, p.48, gives the Romax in a list of cameras released in 1933 and 1934.
  3. Chronology of the Misuzu official website (web archive version Sep 24, 2004).
  4. Baird, p.59.
  5. Picture in Baird, p.59, reproduced in McKeown, p.576.
  6. McKeown, p.576.

Bibliography

The Romax is not listed in Sugiyama.

Links

In Japanese: