Difference between revisions of "Universal Heli-Clack"
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* Type II was supplied with a stereo pair of lenses of about 120 mm focal length, in a stereo Compound shutter, again on an exchangeable lens board. | * Type II was supplied with a stereo pair of lenses of about 120 mm focal length, in a stereo Compound shutter, again on an exchangeable lens board. | ||
− | * Type III was supplied with both stereo lenses ''and'' a central lens for 'panoramic' photography. These are all mounted in a special Compound shutter, with a single set of controls (to set the speed and release the shutter), and a 'stereo/panorama' switch to select which shutter elements open. | + | * Type III was supplied with both stereo lenses ''and'' a central lens for 'panoramic' photography. These are all mounted in a special Compound shutter, with a single set of controls (to set the speed and release the shutter), and a 'stereo/panorama' switch to select which shutter elements open. The single lens is a Rietzschel Linear Anastigmat Serie B, f/5.5 105mm. The stereo lenses are un-named. |
Rietzchel offered the camera with a wide choice of the company's own lenses.<ref name=WdS></ref> | Rietzchel offered the camera with a wide choice of the company's own lenses.<ref name=WdS></ref> |
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The Universal Heli-Clack is a folding plate camera, made by Rietzschel in Munich, Germany, from about 1910. It is an adaptation of the 10×15 cm horizontal model of Rietzschel's Heli-Clack camera, intended for use either as a normal or stereo camera. The camera was made in three versions:
- Type I was supplied with a single lens of about 165 mm focal length. Rietzschel's brochure for the camera[1] describes this as a panoramic camera, though this is hardly a panoramic format. The lens is mounted in an easily-exchanged lens board, so the camera may readily be converted for stereo use (or alternate lenses may be fitted).
- Type II was supplied with a stereo pair of lenses of about 120 mm focal length, in a stereo Compound shutter, again on an exchangeable lens board.
- Type III was supplied with both stereo lenses and a central lens for 'panoramic' photography. These are all mounted in a special Compound shutter, with a single set of controls (to set the speed and release the shutter), and a 'stereo/panorama' switch to select which shutter elements open. The single lens is a Rietzschel Linear Anastigmat Serie B, f/5.5 105mm. The stereo lenses are un-named.
Rietzchel offered the camera with a wide choice of the company's own lenses.[1]
Like the Heli-Clack camera on which it is based, this is a triple-extension camera, allowing telephoto lenses or auxiliary-lens attachments, and close-up use. In addition, the lens standard allows a considerable amount of front rise, which is geared, and shift.
There is a folding Newton finder on top of the camera body.
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1916 Brochure excerpt for the Universal Heli-Clack (following the pages on the more truly panoramic Kosmo-Clack) at Welt der Stereoskopie.
Links
- Universal Heli-Clack Type III with 120 mm f/6.8 Double-anastigmat Dialyt stereo lenses, and a 165 mm Dialyt panoramic lens; a lot in an auction in November 2007 by Rahn AG (archived) in Frankfurt.
- Universal Heli-Clack Type III (lenses not identified) in an auction in September 2009 by Auction Team Breker in Cologne.