Bakelite!
Steve.
Like my century graphic
Weighs a ton. Bakelite may be brittle in sheets, but in a complex form it feels indestructible, well, stable and free from flex.Bakelite!
Steve.
Weighs a ton. Bakelite may be brittle in sheets, but in a complex form it feels indestructible, well, stable and free from flex.I used to work as an engineer in the aerospace industry at a company that made turbine blades for Rolls Royce jet engine out of Titanium, and I know it has the lightest weight and highest tensile strength of any metal on the planet...


Good investment over time.Pentelic marble - it was good enough for the Parthenon.
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FWIW I don't believe any camera is one metal through and through.
Oh god no - my Mom would eat it on site. She's addicted to those things.What's that stuff they use to make "Peeps"?![]()
In the 19th century glass balance springs were experimented with on chronometers. I forget exactly why they were abandoned - probably the insane expense of making them and there were more practical methods of securing the desired result - but it wasn't fragility.It would be useful to have somewhere for the light to get in, whether that is a hole or an assembly of glass parts, so how about a camera body made entirely of glass? Some of it would be black and probably painted, with other bits transparent.
I'm not sure how to make a glass spring to drive the shutter. Possibly a gravity powered "falling hole" shutter could be tried instead, but then you are limited somewhat in the orientation of your camera....
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