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- #MINOLTA AUTOCORD CDS III FOR SALE FULL#
- #MINOLTA AUTOCORD CDS III FOR SALE PROFESSIONAL#
- #MINOLTA AUTOCORD CDS III FOR SALE TV#
#MINOLTA AUTOCORD CDS III FOR SALE PROFESSIONAL#
Both the Minolta and Makina used a scissors folding design with removable backs for sheet and roll film and were aimed at the semi to professional photographer. The first Minolta camera was heavily inspired by the Plaubel Makina, but wasn’t an outright copy of it. Nichidoku would change it’s name in 1931 to Molta Gōshi-gaisha and the new company would build models inspired by other German makers. Nichidoku didn’t want to simply copy German cameras, they wanted to make their own. Minolta can trace it’s roots back to 1928 when a man named Kazuo Tashima created Nichidoku Shashinki Shōten and enlisted the help of two former German camera technicians to build German inspired Japanese cameras that had equal parts German DNA but with a unique Japanese design. That’s not to say that Canon, Nikon, Konica, or any other companies didn’t innovate, but thinking outside the box seemed to be an ethos at Minolta since the very beginning. Although I was too young at the time to appreciate Minolta’s efforts, as I look back at their history, Minolta seemed to be the Japanese company that pushed the envelope more consistently than the others.
#MINOLTA AUTOCORD CDS III FOR SALE TV#
If you watched TV in the 1980s, you likely saw a number of commercials from Minolta with this slogan. +1 for simplicity of use, good images, and overall quality The Talker is easy to use and with its semi-wide angle 35mm lens, won’t stress the primitive auto focus system much, making for a dependable camera to stuff in a bag or the center console of your car. Whether you get the talking or non-talking versions, both versions feature a 4-element “Tessar style” 35mm lens that consistently delivers good images. The Minolta AF-Sv “Talker” is an otherwise ordinary mid 80s fully automatic 35mm point and shoot camera with a gimmicky feature that allows the camera to play back one of three voice reminders to warn you of various pitfalls you might encounter while shooting. Weight: 363 grams (with batteries and lens cap), 308 grams (without)
#MINOLTA AUTOCORD CDS III FOR SALE FULL#
Speeds: 1/8 – 1/625 seconds, Fully AutomaticĮxposure Meter: Coupled CdS Cell w/ Full Programmed AEįlash Mount: In-body Popup Flash, X-sync 1/40 seconds Viewfinder: Scale Focus Reverse Galilean with Albada type frame lines, LED flash and focus confirmation Lens: 35mm f/2.8 Minolta Rokkor coated 4-elements in 3-groupsįocus: Active Auto Focus, 0.8 meters to Infinity The camera was heavily promoted as being “from the mind of Minolta” which they used frequently as a marketing slogan to promote a variety of innovative and clever features. Without the voice feature, the AF-Sv is identical to the non-talking Minolta AF-S which had a 4-element 35mm f/2.8 lens, fully programmed auto exposure, active autofocus, automatic film loading, and an in body automatic flash. Known by it’s nickname “the Talker”, the AF-Sv is notable as having a voice feature in which the camera can play back voice alerts as reminders for things like remembering to load film, that the exposure is too dark, or to check the distance. This is a Minolta AF-Sv, a 35mm point and shoot, fully automatic camera made in Japan by Minolta starting in 1984.
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