Difference between revisions of "Sears KS 500"

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The film advance lever of the KS 500 must be pulled outward to unlock the shutter release and activate match-needle exposure meter readings, with power provided by two silver-oxide button cells (type 357 or SR44 are suitable).
 
The film advance lever of the KS 500 must be pulled outward to unlock the shutter release and activate match-needle exposure meter readings, with power provided by two silver-oxide button cells (type 357 or SR44 are suitable).
  
The KS 500 had a comparatively long run in Sears' lineup (until mid-1982) as their entry-level [[SLR]] option, with the camera's price dropping over time.<ref> It was [https://christmas.musetechnical.com/ShowCatalogPage/1980-Sears-Fall-Winter-Catalog/1312 below USD $150 by the Fall/Winter 1980 catalog], pg. 1312, and in [https://christmas.musetechnical.com/ShowCatalogPage/1982-Sears-Spring-Summer-Catalog/0725 Spring/Summer 1982], pg. 725; scans courtesy [https://christmas.musetechnical.com/ Musetechnical's "Christmas Catalogs & Holiday Wishbooks."]</ref> The autoexposure [[Sears KS-1]] eventually superseded it as Sears' cheapest [[K mount lenses | K-mount]] option.  
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The KS 500 had a comparatively long run in Sears' lineup (into 1983) as their entry-level [[SLR]] option, with the camera's price dropping over time.<ref> It was [https://christmas.musetechnical.com/ShowCatalogPage/1980-Sears-Fall-Winter-Catalog/1312 below USD $150 by the Fall/Winter 1980 catalog], pg. 1312, and in [https://christmas.musetechnical.com/ShowCatalogPage/1983-Sears-Christmas-Book/0434 Christmas 1983], pg. 434; scans courtesy [https://christmas.musetechnical.com/ Musetechnical's "Christmas Catalogs & Holiday Wishbooks."]</ref> The autoexposure [[Sears KS-1]] eventually superseded it as Sears' cheapest [[K mount lenses | K-mount]] option.  
  
  

Revision as of 17:12, 9 May 2021

Immediately following on from the KS 1000, US retailer Sears offered the KS 500 in its 1979 Spring/Summer catalog[1] at a price of USD $239.50 (about $800 in 2021 dollars). This was the second K-mount camera offered by Sears and once again is a rebadging of a Ricoh model—specifically the KR-5 (no suffix).

The initial roughly 13% price savings versus the "1000" seems to have helped sales; but there were quite a few features sacrificed to get there. Available shutter speeds are limited to 1/8 to 1/500 second plus B (with flash sync at 1/60th), there is no depth-of-field preview, and no "ME" (multi-exposure) switch. Neither shutter speeds nor aperture are displayed in the viewfinder. (In place of the KS 1000's aperture "peepsight" on the front of the pentaprism, there is a plain blanking plate.)

The film advance lever of the KS 500 must be pulled outward to unlock the shutter release and activate match-needle exposure meter readings, with power provided by two silver-oxide button cells (type 357 or SR44 are suitable).

The KS 500 had a comparatively long run in Sears' lineup (into 1983) as their entry-level SLR option, with the camera's price dropping over time.[2] The autoexposure Sears KS-1 eventually superseded it as Sears' cheapest K-mount option.


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