I really shouldn't be allowed on the internet. I keep finding strange, obscure cameras that tickle a fancy.
The latest is a very good condition Houghton Klito No. 3 "Falling Plate" camera.
For those not familiar, this is a "Detective" camera, also known as a "falling plate" or "hand" camera. "Hand" because at a mindbogglingly fast f/8 aperture, the camera could (theoretically) be handheld. Falling plate because as you expose each plate, you toggle the switch on top, and the exposed plate falls to the bottom of the camera. Detective because of a misplaced belief that Detectives used concealed, or "unremarkable" cameras. Basically, it was a street camera in it's day.
Entertainingly, apparently "hand" cameras were somewhat controversial when they debuted, with some scoffing and claiming they weren't "real" cameras. Good thing it's different now.
This particular model is very sophisticated, having adjustable aperture, a shutter mechanism that can be re-calibrated, a Beck f/8 "Symmetrical" lens, an exposure counter on top, and a distance gauge on the side. You could also open just the lower compartment and remove exposed plates.
Unlike a typical box camera with a fixed lens, you could adjust focus on this one-- turn the knob on the side to rack the front part of the camera in and out until you had the distance right in the gauge, and then compose either portrait or landscape through the finders.
It even has a yellow slide-in filter inside the front door, so you can take photos with a filter if you wish.
This particular example is 100% complete, and nearly as functional. I'm missing 5 of the plate holders (3¼ x 4¼, or "quarter plate" size), but 7 is sufficient. There's remarkably little corrosion present, except for one or two magazines, and some patina/crud on some of the brass. Manufacturer's catalog claim it can take 12 plates or 24 sheets of film, but I have not even even seen one sheet film septum, let alone a couple dozen. I might try manufacturing some, either 3D printed, or from actual sheet metal. It came with one (heavily exposed) plate from who knows when.
The shutter fires either Very Fast, or Very Slow. The "internal" optics (rear element of the lens, the mirrors for the finders, the inside of the finder lenses) are all very dirty, and need cleaning. The outside optics (front lens element, outside lens surfaces for the finders) are pretty clean. Overall, it appears someone maintained the camera reasonably well for the last century.
Some of the magazines are bent enough to cause problems with the falling mechanism-- which is basically a large coil spring (#3) that presses against the back of the magazines. Each magazine is either a "1" or a "2"-- and they have notches in the top, slightly offset from each other. You load the magazine in alternating order, then when you flip the switch on top to one side, it release the "#1" plate, which is pushed to the end of the rails (they're curved), pivots forward, falls, and stacks up on the bottom. Flip the switch to "#2", and the next plate drops. There's a difficult to read frame counter that counts up to 24, and advances with each flip of the switch.
Air displacement cushions the fall, and there are some springs to push the plates back against the wooden wedge on the bottom door flap, to keep them from bouncing around.
The cameras were made from around 1905 to around 1919, and one catalog I found suggested it was priced at $63 USD. All in all, a really fascinating bit of camera-- I'm hoping to restore it to fully functional condition, and take some photos with it. Anyone have advice for disassembly?
View attachment 291568 View attachment 291573 View attachment 291572 View attachment 291571 View attachment 291570 View attachment 291569
Nice camera Grat. Did you replace the missing plate holders?
SO COOL!! Thanks for sharing. Yes it looks like an afghan box camera, in that it looks durable and portable for street work.
No, and I ran into issues with the restoration-- The screws are very old, very soft, and very easy to damage. When I realized I was on the verge of making things worse, I stopped.
While looking for plate holders, however, I found another Klito, in much better shape, with a full set of holders(!). I beliieve it's a No. 6. It defaults to landscape orientation, and has a modern (for 1906) shutter of the B&L Automat variety. I was able to clean the shutter, apply some minimal lubrication to various mechanical bits, and even get the shutter back to something resembling accurate. In theory, I should be able to make controlled exposures via the shutter.
I even found some plates, although they're going to be tricky to expose, let alone develop, as they date from the 1950's (I know there are modern plates available, but these are panchromatic high speed plates).
Unfortunately, my personal life for the the past year and a half has been one nonstopgodawfulunendingmindnumbingly awful disaster. Photography went from being a way to escape said disaster, to being something I simply didn't have the time or inclination for, and as I stumble back into reality, I'm trying to get back in the frame of mind to enjoy photography again-- let alone experiment with 100+ year old cameras. For this particular camera and process, I need a true dark space, and I've been slacking on that.
Now we're hitting the winter months in Florida, and it's a bit gloomy out (I think we've seen the sun twice since Veteran's day), but I'm hoping to get back to this camera "soon".
In the sense that it's a box, yes, it resembles the Afghan box. But as I understand it, the "magic" of the afghan box is that the negative is exposed, and developed, in place in the camera.
You still have to remove the holders, remove the plates, and develop them. It's also a surprisingly small camera-- About 9x4x6.5 inches (~ 23x10x16,5 cm).
Maybe the images of my 'restoration' (make that rebuild) of the Butcher "The Midg" No.3 falling plate camera can be of assistance?
https://www.flibweb.nl/flibweb/cpg154/thumbnails.php?album=216
I also have a No.2, but the shutter's speed governing system works on friction and I just can't get it set so it actually works. Either it fires on high speed or it stays open.
https://www.flibweb.nl/flibweb/cpg154/thumbnails.php?album=207
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?