Difference between revisions of "Vivitar 700"
(I have one of these now. I haven't used it, but the instruction manual provides some info.) |
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The '''[[Vivitar]] 700''' is one of many cameras for the successful [[110 film]] format. It has a 3-element glass lens (by comparison, a lot of 110 cameras had a plastic lens), and has a built-in electronic flash (via two AA batteries). It appears to date from the late-1970s, and has a typical shape seen in 110 film cameras of the period. | The '''[[Vivitar]] 700''' is one of many cameras for the successful [[110 film]] format. It has a 3-element glass lens (by comparison, a lot of 110 cameras had a plastic lens), and has a built-in electronic flash (via two AA batteries). It appears to date from the late-1970s, and has a typical shape seen in 110 film cameras of the period. | ||
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[[Category:Vivitar]] | [[Category:Vivitar]] | ||
[[Category:110 film]] | [[Category:110 film]] | ||
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Revision as of 07:58, 6 September 2018
image by Matthew Paul Argall (Image rights) |
The Vivitar 700 is one of many cameras for the successful 110 film format. It has a 3-element glass lens (by comparison, a lot of 110 cameras had a plastic lens), and has a built-in electronic flash (via two AA batteries). It appears to date from the late-1970s, and has a typical shape seen in 110 film cameras of the period.
Two alkaline AA batteries are needed for the flash, but otherwise the cameras works without batteries. It has a fixed-focus lens (5 feet/1.5 metres to infinity). It accepts both 100 and 400 ISO film.