Difference between revisions of "Zenit E"

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* [http://www.collection-appareils.fr/album_notices_P_Z/zenit_E/index.html French user manual] at [http://www.collection-appareils.fr Sylvain Halgand's www.collection-appareils.fr]
 
* [http://www.collection-appareils.fr/album_notices_P_Z/zenit_E/index.html French user manual] at [http://www.collection-appareils.fr Sylvain Halgand's www.collection-appareils.fr]
 
* [http://www.rus-camera.com/camera.php?page=zenit&camera=zenite Zenit E] on [http://www.rus-camera.com rus-camera.com]
 
* [http://www.rus-camera.com/camera.php?page=zenit&camera=zenite Zenit E] on [http://www.rus-camera.com rus-camera.com]
 
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* JM Burtscher sovietcamera website :  [http://www.sovietcamera.fr/ Sovietcamera french website]
 
[[Category: 35mm SLR]]
 
[[Category: 35mm SLR]]
 
[[Category: 42mm screw mount]]
 
[[Category: 42mm screw mount]]

Revision as of 14:42, 1 February 2009

The Zenit E was a Russian-built SLR camera body for M42 screw lenses, made from 1965-1968[1]. The Zenit range was quite popular since it was priced moderately and it was offered under several other trademarks or brands (Kalimar, Revueflex, Prinzflex, Photokina, Spiraflex, Cosmorex).

The camera offered fixed 1/30, 1/60, 1/125, 1/250 and 1/500 shutter speeds. It also had manual control for long duration exposures. Focusing was done either by the optimal image sharpness in the viewfinder or simply setting the distance in the distance scale. The distance scale was drawn against the calculator scale, showing the acceptable tolerance, depending on aperture. The minimal focusing distance was about 0.65m with the Industar 50 (50mm f3.5) objective (and 0.46m with the Helios-44 58mm f2[2]) but a set of rings was manufactured for this camera, allowing to do the close distance macro pictures.

The Zenit E requires the user to manually stop down the diaphragm before exposure; the lens has an extra ring for this purpose. The Zenit EM was an upgraded version, with an automatic diaphragm.

It had a selenium meter. The meter's photo cell was placed above the lens mount behind a protecting window, and its instrument was placed beside a two-slice analog exposure calculator. A ring in the meter was coupled to that calculator on which the film speed had to be preselected, and when the meter's needle matched the ring the calculator showed the correct shutter-speed/aperture combinations. This device was not connected to the actual speed/aperture controls.

The Zenit B was similar to the E, but without the meter.


Here the data of the Version "Prinzflex 500E"

Links

=== Sources ===

further links