Roger Cole
Member
Thread creep. 

You're confusing 127 with 110. VERY different things. 127 is basically roll film like 120 only slightly smaller, about 4 cm across, thus the 4x4cm "baby" Rolleis. Far larger negatives than 35mm and capable of fine results with modern films if the camera is. 110 is a sub-miniature format with the sizes you list.
You are right, I wrote 127 and I meant 110. I was surprises those new 110 rolls were pre-flashed with frame boundaries. I actually would be surprised just the same for any format.
All 110 film, even the old rolls, were pre-flashed.
What you need then is a simple plastic lens that will mount on a good quality camera. Lots of the large format folks are using simple plastic meniscus lenses with really interesting results. Shouldn't be too hard to cobble something together inside the gutted barrel of and old lens.
But how could it be possible then that some camera generated 13 x 17 mm and some others 13 x 19 mm? (I must have read this somewhere).
If a 13 x 17 mm camera mounts a 13 x 13 110 cartridge, and it uses the "registration pin" for film advance, the result is going to be a disaster in any case because a 13 x 13 110 cartridge will have its registration pins at a distance slightly above 13mm while a 13 x 17 110 cartridge will have them at a distance slightly superior to 17 mm.
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