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Nagel Vollenda 48

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miki0

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I have a very small Nagel Vollenda 48 camera in good condition with a Xenar 3.5 lens. The lens barrel bears the following inscription: Jos. Schneider & Co Kreuznach No447874 Xenar f:3,5 F= 5cm. Also unusual are the cold shoe and small focus scale.
Can anyone identify the model? Could this be a later third-party modification?
 

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miki0

miki0

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I created a thread in the wrong place. Dear moderators, please move this thread.
 

Hunter_Compton

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I don’t think these features are that unusual. The xenar was a higher tiered lens option over the radionar triplet these are often found with. The cold shoe would have probably been for an accessory rangefinder and the small focus scale as you put it is probably the depth of field calculator.
 
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miki0

miki0

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The cold shoe may have been an optional accessory from the factory, or it may have been an add-on later in its life. The depth of field scale calculator would be stock.

I don’t think these features are that unusual. The xenar was a higher tiered lens option over the radionar triplet these are often found with. The cold shoe would have probably been for an accessory rangefinder and the small focus scale as you put it is probably the depth of field calculator.

The Jos. Schneider & Co. Kreuznach signature indicates an earlier Xenar, as many of the ones I found online no longer had the same signature. Was a cold shoe installed when these cameras were released? Because it looks like it's a factory modification.
 

koraks

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I created a thread in the wrong place.
They are for 127 film, and produce 3x4cm images.
I'll leave it in its present place for now; 3x4cm is kind of in-between MF and 35mm anyway, so...no worries @miki0 and thanks for sharing!

PS: if you want to ask about moving a thread, alert us to a problem with a post etc. please use the 'report' function below the post:
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Ian Grant

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Dr. August Nagel had been one of the founders of Contessa-Nettel which later merged with ICA, Ernemann, Goerz. to form Zeiss Ikon in 1926, with the Zeiss Foundation being the major shareholder. It was a merger forced on the smaller companies who were struggling to compete due to the economic situation in Germany.

Nagel left, founding Nagel in 1928, he didn't use Zeiss lenses, and chose Schneider instead, then quite a small lens company. While relatively successful, Nagel sold the company to Kodak in 1931. They expanded the export of cameras made in the Nagel factory, particularly to North America, a consequence was Schneider's expansion and the introduction of newer lens like the Angulon, and fast S-Xenar

Your camera is one of the last before the Kodak takeover.

Ian
 
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