This is the standard lens, the other standard lens was Industar-50-2 3.5/50 Lens: Helios-44-2 58mm f/2, M42 screw mount, filter thread: 41mm Battery is integrated in film cartridgeĭimensions (l, h, d): Folded: 132 x 100 x 154 mm. Shooting Modes: Automatic exposure, lighten/darken controlĮxposure Count: Yes: In window on back of cameraįilm Release Button: Yes: Switch to open door for cartridgeįilm / Aspect Ratio / Framing: 600 pack film and Type 779 (7.9 x 7.9 cm)įlash: Built-in electronic flash (range: 0.6m – 3.0m) Always firesīattery: No.
Shutter: Two blade Leaf shutter, Between-the-lensįocus Mode: Zone focus: 0.6m – 1.2m, 1.2m – infinityĮxposure Metering / Control: Yes: Electric photocell Rewind: Via crank and bottom release button. X sync at any speed.įrame Counter: Automatic count-up and reset. This was an “L” shaped bracket, that positioned a cold shoe above the rewind crank (see illustration). Kowa E cold shoeFlash: M and X contact, and an accessory shoe mounting port on the right side of (i.e. Meter: External coupled selenium meter on penta-prism housing.įilm Speed: 10 to 1600 ASA (with separate DIN scale). Self-timer of about 8 seconds delay (the V setting on MXV switch).
#Kodak vollenda 620 value plus
Shutter: Seikosha SLV leaf shutter with a range of 1 sec to 1/500th plus B. Kowa E viewfinderFocus: Penta-prism with condenser, Fresnel lens, and split image rangefinder. In the USA, the conversion lenses appear to have been 71mm and 35mm options. Fitted with a Kowa f/2 50mm (6 elements in 4 groups), with an f/4 86mm, and f/4 36mm conversion lenses available, and close-up lenses. Kodak ceased production of 120 rollfilm cameras in the mid 1930's, with the introduction of the 620 size, which is the same film on a slimmer spindle, and the only subsequent 120-film cameras from Kodak were manufactured in the UK in the 1950's and '60's. This is because a roll of film was considered to look like a shotgun cartridge and also to help differentiate between similar cameras that used plates or film packs. 120 rollfilm is the most successful rollfilm format, having now been in production for over 100 years! Some cameras include the word "cartridge" in the model name.
As film numbers as we know them today were not introduced until 1913, it was originally known as No.2 Brownie film. Kodak's first 120 rollfilm camera was the No.2 Brownie in 1901. K o d a k 1 2 0 r o l l f i l m c a m e r a s