Difference between revisions of "Tenax (folding bed camera)"

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Goerz offered a special "Autofoc" feature, a cylindrical mechanism which advanced the lensboard to a standard focus distance automatically when the camera was opened. The "Manufoc" versions of the Tenax lacked this feature<REF>{{McKeown12}} Page 357.  
 
Goerz offered a special "Autofoc" feature, a cylindrical mechanism which advanced the lensboard to a standard focus distance automatically when the camera was opened. The "Manufoc" versions of the Tenax lacked this feature<REF>{{McKeown12}} Page 357.  
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The [[Taro Tenax]] folding bed cameras were the budget line of the original Tenax series.
  
The [[Taro Tenax]] folding bed cameras were the budget line of the original Tenax series.
 
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Revision as of 20:27, 29 March 2015

Before its 1926 merger into Zeiss Ikon, the Berlin company C. P. Goerz sold several folding-bed plate cameras under the name Tenax[1] and Pocket Tenax, beginning around 1906. These were part of Goerz's Tenax camera family.

Plate sizes were 6.5×9 cm, 9×12, and 10×15 cm.

Goerz offered a special "Autofoc" feature, a cylindrical mechanism which advanced the lensboard to a standard focus distance automatically when the camera was opened. The "Manufoc" versions of the Tenax lacked this feature[2]. The Taro Tenax folding bed cameras were the budget line of the original Tenax series.



Notes

  1. The Tenax model name had been reused by Zeiss Ikon starting in 1938 for unrelated 24×24 mm format 35mm cameras; see Tenax II and Tenax I.
  2. McKeown, James M. and Joan C. McKeown's Price Guide to Antique and Classic Cameras, 12th Edition, 2005-2006. USA, Centennial Photo Service, 2004. ISBN 0-931838-40-1 (hardcover). ISBN 0-931838-41-X (softcover). Page 357.


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