Siluro
Nemrod Siluro with flash unit image by Tony Kemplen (Image rights) |
The Siluro was an underwater camera made by Nemrod Metzeler in Barcelona, Spain between c.1960 and 1966[1].
The body is a plastic cylinder with a sports finder at the top, a large handle on the user's left and a hinged front. It is equipped with valve to allow pressurising the interior to ensure good sealing, allowing it to operate to depths of 40m. There are some ballast lead weights built in. Single speed shutter (~1/55s) with an f16 fixed-focus lens set to a depth-of-field of around 1-2.5m. The camera is usually shown with a flash gun fitted in front of the handle.
Film format is 12 6x6cm exposures on 120 film.
The Siluro is a reworking of Jordan Klein's 1950s design, the Mako Shark. However that camera uses 620 film and lacks the lead weighting designed to give the camera neutral buoyancy. Also, the back of the Siluro is attached by spring clips rather than screwing closed.
Notes
Links
- Nemrod Siluro blog post at Raúl Sá Dantas' Classic Cameras
- YouTube video of Siluro flash by euroflashbulbs
Original packaging and manual image by Coleccionando Camaras (Image rights) |