Difference between revisions of "Zenit Quarz DS8-3"
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Lens: Meteor-8M 1.8 / 9 - 38 mm, single coated | Lens: Meteor-8M 1.8 / 9 - 38 mm, single coated | ||
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+ | Filter thread: M46 x 0.75 (aka 46mm) | ||
Manual Zoom | Manual Zoom |
Revision as of 12:32, 21 August 2020
Zenit Quarz DS8-3
Accepts Double Super 8 reel film (reels with up to 10m film)
Year: 1971 - 1983
Lens: Meteor-8M 1.8 / 9 - 38 mm, single coated
Filter thread: M46 x 0.75 (aka 46mm)
Manual Zoom
Frame rates: single frame, 12, 18, 24, 36
Manual / Auto Exposure
+/- correction for auto
Cable release socket
No sound
No batteries needed (selenium light meter)
Spring wound drive motor
Made in Russia
Manufacturer: Zenit (Mechanical Factory Krasnogorsk, USSR)
Original price in Eastern Germany (German Democratic Republic) in 1976: 706,10 Mark (s. comments)
Prices on eBay:
- eBay Germany:
- EUR 29,00 (+ EUR 7,90 shipping) in 04/2006
- EUR 1,99 (+ EUR 7,00 shipping) in 11/2006
- EUR 1,99 (+ EUR 6,00 shipping) in 04/2007
Russian manual: http://www.zenitcamera.com/mans/quarz-2x8s-3/quarz-2x8s-3.html
Comments
Double-Super8-Camera!!!
Description found here, some mistakes corrected using the information from David Haardt's web page:
- Motor: mechanical motor with a clock spring mechanism.
- Film frame: 4.22 x 5.69 mm
- Film: Double Super 8 film, plastic spools, 7.5m or 10m long
- Speed: Speed - fixed 12, 18, 24, 36, frames per second, and single shooting.
- Shutter speeds: 12fps-1/23s, 18fps-1/20s, 24fps-1/45s, 36fps-1/68s, single frame: 1/20s
- Lens: Zoom lens Meteor-8M 1.8/9-38mm
- Focusing: via focusing screen or via distance marks on the lens.
- Light meter: The camera has a selenium light meter with match-needle in the viewfinder.
- Film speed setting: Manual setting of film speed 20-200 ISO (domestic version) or 12-160 ISO (export version)
- Viewfinder: Reflex 0.5-2.05x
- Shooting mode: Camera has manual and semi auto mode to set up aperture (match-needle)
- Dimensions: 186 x 68 x 150mm
- Weight: 1.6 Kg
Remark:
The original price is hard to convert to current currencies:
- The official exchange rate between Mark (Eastern Germany) and DM (Western Germany) was 1:1, which would give approx. 350 EUR. This official exchange rate also reflects that the average income was nearly the same in Eastern and Western Germany in the early seventies (approx. 1100 Mark vs. approx. 1300 DM).
- Nevertheless the unofficial (read: illegal) exchange rate between Mark and DM was somewhere between 10:1 and 20:1 in Eastern Germany, so the original price would convert to 18 to 35 EUR.
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