Zenit C

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The Zenit C[1] is a compact all-mechanical 35 mm SLR camera made in the Soviet Union. It is the second model in the Zenit camera line, following only three years after the original Zenit 1. It was made by Krasnogorskii Mekhanicheskii Zavod (Krasnogorsk Mechanical Works) near Moscow, between 1955 and 1961.[2]

Description

Substantially, the camera is a member of the extended Leica family, with the early Zenits being based on the rangefinder Zorki, itself based on the original FED, a direct copy of the Leica II. In many ways, the continuity between the Leica and the Zenit, while they are different types of camera made in different countries at different times, is very tangible in several aspects of the Zenit, most notably the physical shape of the body and the bottom-loading film chamber, which requires the exact same precautions and procedure as for a Leica.

To wit, film is loaded by removing the base of the camera, not opening the back. The film must be prepared: more film must be cut away from the leader to extend the length of the "tongue." Care must be taken not to leave a hard corner when doing this. The mechanical intricacies of the advance mechanism can result in film with an untrimmed leader being chewed up by the camera, which can result in chips of film going into the shutter and possibly ruining it. No other method works reliably or quickly--especially no method that involves placing any foreign object down behind the film gate or locking open the shutter and using one's fingers to guide the film.

The C model is an incremental update of the Zenit 1, with much of the camera being identical. The most important change is the addition of flash synchronisation via a PC socket on the front of the top superstructure. The synchronisation delay is variable between zero (X-synch.) and 25 milliseconds (a little greater than M-synch.) with a control under the shutter speed selector, similar to that on the slightly earlier Leica IIIf. The reason for this adjustable synch is that there were many types of flashbulb on the market, many of which required a delay other than the standard "M-bulb" delay of 20 milliseconds; electronic flash was rare and expensive at the time, but it is supported as well with no-delay X-synch. There is no accessory shoe; any flash would have to be mounted on a bracket. If the synch is set incorrectly part of the frame will not be flashed.

Another difference, not obvious to the user, is the use of a cord to pull the mirror down into position during film advance/shutter cocking, replacing a metal arm which does this job in the Zenit 1[3]. Unlike the Zenit 1, film is released for rewind by depressing and rotating the collar around the shutter release button to point at 'B' (on the Zenit 1, the rewind release is a separate, simple lever). The shutter speed selector is also very slightly different: whereas on the earlier model, the whole selector is rotated to align the desired speed with a mark on the superstructure, on the Zenit C the mark is on the central axis of the selector.

Shutter

The shutter is a very basic mechanism common to many SLR's and rangefinders of the early 20th century, based ultimately on that of the Leica. The shutter-speed dial rotates in one direction when advancing the film, then spins rapidly in the other direction as the shutter is released. The curtains move at one fixed speed, and all changes to the shutter speed are done by changing the width of the gap between them. There is no long-exposure timer to delay the second curtain, and the mechanism is considered too imprecise to evenly expose with a slit small enough to approximate 1/1000th of a second, so the camera only has 5 instant speeds. The speeds are B (Bulb)[4] plus 1/25th (or 1/30th) to 1/500.

To set the speed, the camera must be cocked and the dial must be lifted up slightly, turned and set back into place at the desired position. The tension of the curtain mainsprings may be changed on the underside of the camera with the bottom off, and thus a semi-skilled technician can fix uneven exposure if the correct procedure is followed.

It is imperative that the shutter speed is only set when the shutter has been cocked, and never in an un-cocked position. This is a problem common to many cameras based on a Leica shutter, but it is especially endemic to Russian designs, so it should be assumed that any Russian camera suffers from it until it is definitively known otherwise (some Russian leaf shutters even have a similar, technically-unrelated problem). If the shutter speed is changed while uncocked, and the film is then advanced, a pin in the timing mechanism can break, ruining the camera. If it does not break, it may behave erratically for many shots before normalizing. If one accidentally changes the shutter speed while uncocked, usually it is possible to put it back where it was without damage, but it is best to avoid doing it altogether for safety.

Some reports say (and the manual seems to imply by absence of any warnings) that the shutter speed may be changed while the camera is un-cocked. This is similar to the FED IIb and later FEDs, which also had the shutter speed indicator on the axle of the shutter speed dial. However, it is best not to trust that this fix was consistently applied, and at any rate it is likely that doing so still places strain on what can be, at this point, 65-year-old components, so it is best to cock before changing speeds in any event.

Additionally, the dial should not be forced through the blank sector between B and 1/500, as it is designed to stop rather than turn full circle.

It is possible to cock the shutter and lower the mirror without advancing the film by carefully rotating the shutter-speed selector counter-clockwise until it locks--if it slips backwards the shutter slit will slide open and partially expose the frame in an uncontrolled manner, so care must be taken to turn it only counter-clockwise. Since it is possible to take a picture and then recock without advancing, multiple exposures are therefore very easy to achieve, unlike on, say, the FED, where recocking the shutter without advancing is a finicky business.

However, the advance knob will be disengaged from the shutter after being manually recocked in this way, and when the photographer winds on to the next frame, the advance knob will turn twice as far, leaving a blank frame. Thus, it is pointless to try this method to recover a frame that has been accidentally left blank in the middle of a roll, as using this method will be merely sacrificing one frame to save another. If, however, a blank frame happens at the end of the roll, nothing will be sacrificed by recocking to salvage the shot.

As a final addendum on proper care of the Zenit's shutter, never leave it in the sun if it is uncocked with the lens focused to infinity. While the shutter curtains are not quite touching the focal plane, they are close enough that a lens set to infinity can concentrate the sun's rays more than enough to burn clear through them, ruining the curtains and the film. This information goes for all cloth focal plane shutters that do not always have a mirror in the light path at rest--Leicas, other rangefinders, early SLR's like the Zenit, later SLR's with mirror lockup--in short, on all these cameras, one must take the lens well off infinity and/or cock it if there's even a chance it may sit face-up in the sun.

Viewfinder

The viewfinder is a fixed-pentaprism design, with a flat ground glass for the focusing screen. The mirror is not quick-return: on cocking the shutter, the mirror descends, and on firing, it rises. This leads to a condition in which the camera must be cocked to view through the viewfinder--while a modern photographer will consider this a disadvantage, the hidden advantage in it lies in the impossibility of missing a shot because the shutter is uncocked--if the mirror is up, a shot cannot be composed in the first place, and so the photographer will get in the habit of re-cocking immediately upon firing.

Lens

The selection of lenses is limited, unfortunately. The Zenit mount is essentially unique to the early Zenits (incl. the reimagined Zenit 3 variant, the Kristall.) It is an m39 mount (metric 1-millimeter threading with a diameter of 39mm) like the Leica Thread Mount and others. However, it is an SLR mount and the flange distance (i.e., between the film and the mating surface of the lens mount) is therefore much larger, as there is a mirror-box between the shutter and the lens. An LTM (Leica Thread Mount) lens mounted on the camera will only focus extremely close-up (approximately a foot, give or take several inches), and a Zenit lens mounted on an LTM camera will fail to engage the rangefinder, or engage the rangefinder incorrectly. The focus scale will read incorrectly on the lens, and the bulk of the focus range should be "beyond infinity--" i.e., completely out of focus at any distance.

The only cameras outside this series that can reliably take Zenit m39 lenses are cameras fitted with adapters. There exist adapters for m42 mount, which has an almost identical flange distance (Zenit: 45.2mm, M42: 45.46mm), allowing a simple double-threaded ring to serve as an adapter-focus may be very incrementally off, and the lens may focus very slightly short of infinity--probably well within tolerances when stopped down. These m42 adapters can be used with K-mount-to-m42 adapters as well, since K-mount has the same flange distance as M42 (since Pentax wanted to streamline the adaptation of their earlier Takumar lenses.)

As well, an adapter was provided for the Start SLR, which had a proprietary bayonet mount for which only one lens made it to production. Using an adapter and m39 Zenit lenses is the only way to use any lens but the special Start-mount Helios-44 with the Start camera. Unfortunately, the bayonet version of the Helios-44 was the single lens to offer automatic aperture on the Start.

The standard lens is either a rigid-bodied 5 cm f/3.5 Industar-22 or the Industar-50 which replaced it from about 1959. Both are coated Tessar-type lenses (Industar was the Soviet name for Tessar-type lenses), sometimes thought of as the Russian version of the Leitz Elmar collectively. Both are somewhat poorly designed for an SLR lens, having more in common with rangefinder lenses. The aperture control is manual on both, with no preset. Furthermore, the aperture ring is at the front, inside the focusing ring. For some examples, the focus ring turns freely enough that it is possible to disturb the focus by stopping down the aperture, and so critical focusing must be done with these lenses stopped down.





Conclusion

While hardly what modern photographers would recognize as a full-featured SLR, the Zenit C is a small, well-built camera with a venerable design lineage. When obtainable cheaply, it can be rewarding as a solidly-built, comparatively tiny SLR with very few extra features to wear out or break. The limited selection of lenses may be a factor in choosing not to buy it, but the lenses that do exist are Soviet glass from an era when the lens industry in the USSR made good copies of German designs cheaply, and the Industars have a good reputation as being a similar lens to the Leitz Elmar. A good second lens for this camera may be the Helios-44, another, more modern normal with a preset ring and a wider maximum aperture, noted for its good bokeh. The Mir-1 retrofocal wide lens (37mm/2.8) exists in this mount, as well as a decent variety of long lenses including the Helios-40 85mm/1.5, the Tair-11 133mm/2.8 and the Telemar-22 200mm/5.6.

Specifications

  • Type: 35 mm single-lens reflex camera
  • Format: 24x36 mm on standard 135 cartridge film
  • Manufacturer: KMZ
  • Years of production: 1955-61
  • Number produced: Est. 232,949[5]
  • Standard lens: Industar-50 1:3.5 F=5 cm
  • Shutter:
    • Cloth focal-plane shutter. 1/25 - 1/500 second plus 'B' on early examples; 1/30 - 1/500 second plus 'B' later. Cable release socket in shutter release button. No delayed action.
    • Flash synchronisation by PC socket. Variable synchronisation delay, 0-25 ms.
  • Viewfinder: Pentaprism viewfinder with ground glass focusing screen. No prismatic focusing aids. High magnification, low coverage (aprox. 80% of lens field).
  • Dimensions (width x depth x height): 140 x 50 x 90 mm (body only).


Notes

  1. The 'C' is a Cyrillic 'S', and stands for "sinkhronizirovannyy," "synchronized," referring to the shutter's being synchronised for flash. However, even when in Latin script, the name is marked on the camera as 'Zenith C'.
  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). p. 553.
  3. The page on the Zenit 1 'camera line' (in Russian) formerly at the KMZ Archive (http://www.zenitcamera.com) and archived at the Internet Archive 'Wayback Machine' in December 2008, states only that the metal-arm mechanism was 'not very successful'.
  4. which can give convenient long exposure by locking down the shutter release; press and twist counterlockwise
  5. Production figures formerly shown at the KMZ Archive, and archived at the Internet Archive 'Wayback Machine' in June 2006.

Links

  • Manual (in English) formerly at the KMZ Archive, and archived at the Internet Archive 'Wayback Machine' in December 2008.
  • Zenit C at www.collection-appareils.fr (in French)