onre
Member
Nowadays the cheapest 50 mm Trioplan has a small folding camera attached to it.
The Exa (zero as it is often called) and the 1 series all had interchangeable prism or folding hood viewfinders.The Exa 1's being system cameras?
According to this author and I have seen references to it elsewhere, Pentacon / Ihagee did both: some of the original EXA was produced by Rheinmetall and the M42 mount 1B (part of production) and 1C by Certo.The author of that site seemingly mixes up manufacturers. Pentacon did not licence EXA production to Certo, but to Rheinmetall.
M42 Exas made by Certo
- VEB Pentacon licensed the production of screw-mount Exas (some late Ib *4.4 and all Ic *4.5) to another East-German maker, Certo. Cameras built by Certo have serial numbers preceded with a letter C.
I got first an Exa Ib, which has M42 mount. Then I got a second Exa Ib for a steal, basically to get a prism viewfinder. Some really good pictures came out of the Exas, so I was curious to get an Exakta. Eventually a VXIIb was found locally in excellent shape, with a Tessar lens. Learned the left-hand tricks and started to get additional lenses - what good is a SLR without glass? Then, one of those lenses (Isco 35) came attached to a second VXIIb. To make it short, now I keep all the Exakta things in my office, I run out of room at home!
Not doubting what you say, but I never realised than any Exa's or Exakta's used an M42 mount ?
Exaktas are beautiful.
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Picture was taken with another Exakta, Biotar and the shortest macro ring.
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