Difference between revisions of "Stereo Puck"
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The '''Puck Stereo''' was a [[Stereo]] box camera made by [[Thornton-Pickard]]. It could take eight 2× 40x55 mm stereo photographs on a type No. [[120]] film roll. The wooden box was covered with grained leatherette and had enameled and plated metal fittings. It had a pair of achromatic f12.5 100mm [[meniscus lens]]es, and a spring powered single-speed sector [[shutter]] for speed 1/20 sec. or B mode. The camera had a [[brilliant finder]] on top and a [[red window]] in the back. Production dates: maybe from ca. 1925 to 1935. | The '''Puck Stereo''' was a [[Stereo]] box camera made by [[Thornton-Pickard]]. It could take eight 2× 40x55 mm stereo photographs on a type No. [[120]] film roll. The wooden box was covered with grained leatherette and had enameled and plated metal fittings. It had a pair of achromatic f12.5 100mm [[meniscus lens]]es, and a spring powered single-speed sector [[shutter]] for speed 1/20 sec. or B mode. The camera had a [[brilliant finder]] on top and a [[red window]] in the back. Production dates: maybe from ca. 1925 to 1935. |
Revision as of 19:11, 11 July 2011
image by John Nuttall (Image rights) |
The Puck Stereo was a Stereo box camera made by Thornton-Pickard. It could take eight 2× 40x55 mm stereo photographs on a type No. 120 film roll. The wooden box was covered with grained leatherette and had enameled and plated metal fittings. It had a pair of achromatic f12.5 100mm meniscus lenses, and a spring powered single-speed sector shutter for speed 1/20 sec. or B mode. The camera had a brilliant finder on top and a red window in the back. Production dates: maybe from ca. 1925 to 1935.
Link
- Puck Stereo at Stereoskopie.com [1] (shutter speed described faster than in other sources)