Difference between revisions of "Zorki 4"

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[http://www.flickr.com/photos/martintaylor/2313479375/in/pool-camerapedia http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2184/2313479375_300b9f22b4_m.jpg]<br /><center>Cyrillic-lettered Zorki 4<br />with [[Industar]] lens and auxiliary finder<br /><small>by Martin Taylor</small> {{with permission}}</center></div>
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[http://www.flickr.com/photos/martintaylor/2313479375/in/pool-camerawiki http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2184/2313479375_300b9f22b4_m.jpg]<br /><center>Cyrillic-lettered Zorki 4<br />with [[Industar]] lens and auxiliary finder<br /><small>by Martin Taylor</small> {{with permission}}</center></div>
 
Produced by the [[KMZ]] factory in Krasnogorsk, Russia, the '''Zorki 4''' was possibly the most popular of all [[Zorki]] cameras, with 1,715,677 cameras made. The Zorki 4 was also the first of the Zorki cameras to be exported in large numbers to the west.
 
Produced by the [[KMZ]] factory in Krasnogorsk, Russia, the '''Zorki 4''' was possibly the most popular of all [[Zorki]] cameras, with 1,715,677 cameras made. The Zorki 4 was also the first of the Zorki cameras to be exported in large numbers to the west.
  

Revision as of 18:39, 3 April 2011

Produced by the KMZ factory in Krasnogorsk, Russia, the Zorki 4 was possibly the most popular of all Zorki cameras, with 1,715,677 cameras made. The Zorki 4 was also the first of the Zorki cameras to be exported in large numbers to the west.

When the Zorki 4 rangefinder was introduced in 1956, its contemporaries included the Zorki S, Zorki 2S, FED 2b, Leica M3 (introduced two years before), Leica IIIg, Nikon S2, Canon VT, Canon L1. The Zorki 4's production run outlasted all of them. When it morphed into the Zorki 4K by 1973, its contemporaries included the FED 4b, Leica M4 and M5, Nikon F2, and Canon F-1 and Canon Canonet QL 17 GIII.

The Zorki 4 is basically a Zorki 3S with a self-timer. It retained all of the features and strong points of the 3S. The early bodies have vulcanite body covering, engraved shutter speeds - 1s, 1/5, 1/10, 1/25, 1/50, 1/100, 1/250, 1/500, 1/1000 +B - and strap lugs. Later bodies (post ~1965) have fabric covering and the more modern base 2 logarithmic shutter speed progression -1s, 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/15, 1/30, 1/60, 1/125, 1/250, 1/500, 1/1000 - and the figures are silk-screened. By the mid-sixties, the strap lugs had disappeared. Lenses were interchangeable, fitting via a 39mm Leica-type thread. The camera was supplied with either a Jupiter-8 50mm f/2, or Industar-50 50mm f/3.5 lens; several other lenses were available.

Operation

As with other Soviet-era rangefinders, the shutter speed selector rotates when the shutter is released, and should not be changed until after the shutter has been cocked. If you change the shutter speed without cocking the shutter first, the setting pin can be broken when you advance the film and cock the shutter.

Links

General links

Repair notes

Documentation and manuals

There is a manual for the Zorki 4K in the Russian Camera Collection website.

Another source for a manual is Mike Butkus' website.

Zorki cameras
FED-Zorki | 1 | S | 2 | 2-C (S) | 3 | 3M | 3S | 4 | 4K | Mir | 5 | 6 | 10/11 | 12 | 35M