Tenax

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Tenax was a model name used by the German company Goerz at the beginning of the XXth century.

After Goerz was absorbed in the Zeiss Ikon company, the name Tenax was re-used successively for three different camera models.

The Tenax II (Zeiss Ikon 580/27)

The first one was first named Tenax in short, and became the Tenax II when the Tenax I was released. Its Zeiss Ikon code number was 580/27. Launched in 1938, it was a 24x24mm rangefinder camera with a rapid-action advance lever placed around the lens.

The coupled rangefinder was integrated in the viewfinder. It included a wedge-shaped rotating lens, that was actually attached to the lens and was interchanged with it. This system was much like the one on the Super Ikonta, Super Nettel or Nettax.

The shutter, placed behind the lens, was a Compur-Rapid leaf shutter to 1/400.

The lens was interchangeable but only very few wide angle and tele lenses were produced. The very limited range of lenses was the following:

  • Carl Zeiss Jena 4cm f/2 Sonnar standard lens
  • Carl Zeiss Jena 4cm f/2.8 Tessar standard lens
  • Carl Zeiss Jena 2.7cm f/4.5 Orthometar wide-angle lens
  • Carl Zeiss Jena 7.5cm f/4 Sonnar tele lens

The Tenax II was certainly inspired by the Robot camera, a small 24x24mm camera with spring-driven motorized film advance, launched in 1934. The format was indeed the same, as well as the emphasis on rapid action shooting. The rangefinder Tenax II was more sophisticated, but it was not commercially as successful, and did not survive the war, unlike the Robot.

A special version of the Tenax existed for X-ray pictures, called the Röntgen-Tenax

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The Tenax I (Zeiss Ikon 570/27)

The Tenax I was actually launched after the Tenax II. As the Tenax II, it was a 24x24mm square-format camera, with a rapid-advance lever around the lens. But it was a much simpler camera, with a completely different body, no rangefinder, a simple folding viewfinder on the top plate, and a behind the lens Compur shutter to 1/300. Most of them were equipped with a Zeiss Novar 3.5cm f/3.5 lens. It also existed with a Carl Zeiss Jena 3.5cm f/2.8 Tessar; in limited numbers.

The production began in 1939, and it was nearly halted in 1941. There was a limited production during the rest of the war.

After the war, the Eastern Zeiss Ikon company continued the model. At the beginning the shutter was a Compur to 1/300 or a Compur-Rapid to 1/500, then it became the East German Tempor to 1/300. The lens could be the same Zeiss Novar 35mm f/3.5, or a Carl Zeiss Jena 37.5mm f/3.5 Tessar. The body code number was 111/23 with the Novar and 111/24 with the Tessar.

The Tenax was modified in 1953 with a fixed viewfinder integrated in a higher top plate with the exposure counter inside it, and a revised advance lever. Soon after it was renamed Taxona, because the Eastern Zeiss Ikon company had lost the rights to use the traditional Zeiss Ikon names, property of the Western Zeiss Ikon company. At the same time, the Novar name became Novonar. The tip of the advance lever became black in 1954. The production ended in 1959.

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The Tenax Automatic

In 1960, Zeiss Ikon Stuttgart reused the Tenax name on a small viewfinder camera named Tenax Automatic. As its name implied, it had an automatic exposure driven by a selenium meter. Its Zeiss code number was 10.0651.

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