Canon F1 Camera Serial Numbers Average ratng: 7,7/10 4757 reviews

Camera serial number in Canon EOS Digital Cameras. Mspringfield wrote in post #6730672 Max, Apparently Canon put a date code on their film cameras so I can't see that they would not do it on their digital cameras.

King's Quest: Quest For The Crown is an online MASTER game that you can play at Emulator Online. This free Sega Master System game is the United States of America region version for the USA. King's Quest: Quest For The Crown is a single title from the many adventure games and arcade games offered for this console. The series was a big hit for DOS, Apple II, Apple IIGS, Mac, even Amiga, but even if you haven’t played it before and you’re just a fan of retro adventure games, you’ll also get a kick out of the Kings Quest lineup. Download Kings Quest 1, 2, & 3 for Free. AGD Interactive offers each version as a free download for Mac or Windows. Download King's Quest VI: Heir Today, Gone Tomorrow for Mac kq6.img.sit (10.99 MiB / 11.52 MB) System 7.0 - 7.6 - Mac OS 9 / DiskCopy image, compressed w/ Stuffit. King's quest android. 1986 King's Quest I: Quest for the Crown 1987 King's Quest II: Romancing the Throne 1988 King's Quest III: To Heir is Human 1989 King's Quest IV: The Perils of Rosella 1990 King's Quest V: Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder! 1992 King's Quest VI: Heir Today, Gone Tomorrow 1994 King's Quest VII: The Princeless Bride 2010 King's Quest I VGA Remake.

Nikon M
image by Cheol Jang
(Image rights)

The Nikon was the first camera introduced by the optical manufacturer Nippon Kogaku K.K. It is a 35mm rangefinder camera, now known as the Nikon I. The original design was approved by September 1946. After over a year of development and testing, manufacture began in March 1948. Sales began in September 1948 with a shipment of 100 cameras to Hong Kong. Production grew slowly over the next year, with all but a few of the cameras being sold to overseas markets including the United States. Because it uses the Zeiss' Contax camera mount, the Nikon camera bears a strong external resemblance to that camera. However, both the shutter and rangefinder mechanism followed the Leica's, resulting in a simpler, easier to manufacture design.

The factory, encouraged by the Japanese government, chose the 24 × 32mm frame size pioneered by Chiyoda Kogaku—known as the Nippon format—which yielded more frames per length of film, and matched more closely the common paper sizes. However, the United States importers, Overseas Finance and Trading Company, objected to this non-standard format. It did not correspond to the automatic slide cutting machines being used in the US, and the images might be sliced in the middle. In addition, the Central Purchasing Office (CPO) that controlled the sales of cameras to the military exchange stores in Japan decided that they would not approve cameras for sale with that format either. Effectively cut off from the two most important markets for their new camera, Nippon Kogaku redesigned the camera's film gate, pressure plate and gearing in August 1949. This became the Nikon M. Introduced in the autumn of 1949, this model can be recognized by the M preceding the body number. The Nikon's body casting and shutter did not permit increasing the format to a full 24 x 36mm. Therefore Nippon Kogaku settled for an intermediate frame format of 24 × 34mm, but did change the gearing to increase the number of perforations per image to the standard 8 (instead of 7 for the 24 x 32), This was acceptable to the export market as slides, although still slightly narrower, were now always cut between frames.

How to use YGDP Flash Tool: If you want to learn to use YGDP Flash Tool, then head over to Page. How to flash coolpad 8720l english. Readme Once:.

The Nikon M was sold in the PXs, and United States sales resumed, but the camera received little attention in the western media until the fall of 1950, when photographers from the Life magazine began reporting on the Nikkor lenses' sharpness. The Nikkor-P.C 1:2 f=8.5cm received the first attention, but the 5cm f1.5 (later f1.4) and 135mm Nikkors also received praise. A demand to fit Nikkors to reporters' Leicas were immediately met at the factory in Tokyo, and soon the word spread that these Japanese lenses were just as good as, or possibly better than their German counterparts.

In November 1950, Nippon Kogaku made built-in flash synchronization a factory standard.

Nikon M, S, and SP
image by Rick Soloway
(Image rights)


The Nikon S, was a Nikon M with these flash sync contacts, two double sockets set in the upper left-hand edge of the body. (The M was dropped from the serial numbers in April 1951.) All cameras sold with this feature are considered a Nikon S by the factory, even if marked M.


The Nikon I, M and S all appear similar in appearance. They are heavy, have shutter speeds only up to 1/500th of second and the viewfinder for the 50mm lens is small. Despite these shortcomings, the Nikon S sold well with over 34,000 manufacture4d from 1951 through 1954. By chance, a number of Nikon S cameras have one more serial number digit, known as the 8-digit Nikon S. When reaching 6099999 the engraver continued at 60910000, but it was soon realized that the long serial number was impractical, and after some 1200 cameras, the numbering reverted to 6100000. The 609 prefix refers to the date the design was approved in September 1946. The 8-digit camera is about twice as valuable as the ordinary 7-digit version, while Nikons MIOJ (Made in Occupied Japan) are even more valuable.

Several highly sought-after models were made available throughout the 1950s, and the first SLR camera from this maker, the Nikon F, shares the basic body configuration of the latest rangefinder models. All Nikon rangefinders are considered highly collectible and fetch very high sale prices, commanding just as high prices as those for Leica cameras of the same period.


  • See also the page about lenses in Nikon rangefinder mount.
image by Geoff Harrisson(Image rights)

Links

In English:

  • Official Nikon's History & Technology ste:
  • Short history of Nikon until 1949 (pdf) at the Nikon Historical Society website, with details about the Nikon I
  • Nikon S2 at Photoethnography by Karen Nakamura
  • Nikon S3 at Scott's Photographica Collection
  • Nikon S2 at the Vintage Nikon DSLR website
  • Nikon MS rangefinder instruction manual at www.orphancamers.com
Japanese 35mm focal plane VF and RF (edit)
Leica screw mountAlta Bessa L/T/R Canon II/III/IV Canon VT Canon VI-T Canon L-3 Canon P Canon 7 Canon 7s Chiyoca Chiyotax Honor S1 Honor SL Ichicon-35 Jeicy Konica FR Leotax Leotax G Melcon Melcon II Minolta 35 Muley Nicca Nicca III-L Nippon Tanack 35/IIIS/IV-S Tanack SD Tanack VP Teica Yasuhara T981
Leica M mountBessa R2/R3/R4 Konica Hexar RF Minolta CLE Rollei 35 RF Zeiss Ikon
Nikon mountBessa R2S Nikon rangefinder models
Contax G mountContax G1 Contax G2
OtherBessa R2C Kwanon Tanack V3
Japanese TLR and pseudo TLR ->
Japanese 6×6, 4.5×6, 3×4 and 4×4 ->
  • Nikon SP Rangefinder instruction manual at www.orphancameras.com
  • Articles at Cameraquest:
  • Nikon S, Nikon S2 on www.collection-appareils.fr by Sylvain Halgand (in French)

In Japanese:

  • Nikon kamera no koneta, with many documents on the Nikon rangefinder models
Retrieved from 'http://camera-wiki.org/index.php?title=Nikon_rangefinder_models&oldid=184185'