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Praktica Appreciation Thread

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Thanks for the welcome.

Actually I do have a Helios-44, but it's attached to my Zenit-E and I use it all the time. I've thought of CZJ Tessar and Pancolar. We'll see...

I've put in a silver-oxide battery as recommended by GRHazelton and now the light metering seems to work. Thanks for the idea!
 
Two figures:

In Dresden between 1945 and 1990 about 10 million SLRs were made.

In the record year of the japanese industry 1980 about 7.5 million SLRs were made.
 
The Americans built zillions of Shermans, the Russians even more T-34s. With which German tank production couldn't keep up. But I still prefer to sit in a Tiger on the battlefield.

A last (miniature) camera for 2015. The Original Cosina CX-2, rebadged as Praktica CX-1 and Porst 135.

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which comes with its own winder and flash

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and then looks like this. The lens becomes visible by rotating the front panel. Very James-bondish.

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2016 will bring something "special".
 

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I assume the Praktica version was rebranded by Pentacon's west-german importer and had for the rest no link to the GDR.

I rank that camera under "Minox 35 successors". I never came it across in real life, thus am quite surprised by learning about that accessory winder.
 
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The Americans built zillions of Shermans, the Russians even more T-34s. With which German tank production couldn't keep up. But I still prefer to sit in a Tiger on the battlefield.

OT. would you prefer to sit inside a tank that barely moves (I think the top speed of a Tiger was 6 km/h), gas thirsty, mechanically unreliable?

Most of the Tiger broke down in action, and in any case a smart American or Soviet tank commander would have called CAS...P-47s or Shturmoviks could easily take care of Tigers, Panthers and any other heavy tanks of the time.

The closest thing to a Tiger in the camera world is the Almaz 103, wonderful performance on paper, but completely unreliable.
 
I was only comparing tanks as an example of (Japanese) quantity versus (German) quality. While the Japanese won, flooding the market with their electronics I still prefer my Praktica.

Below, part of the last Praktica to arrive in 2015. No doubt somebody will immediately guess which one.

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Obviously for the Praktica Power Drive ...


(You could also have ordered an Elgawa flash.)
 
I already have 2 different Elgawa / East-German flashes which connect to the mains instead of using batteries. Nothing special about those and not really Praktica.

Powerdrive ?
 
There's also the battery powered inverter that can be used to take the Elgawa flash out with you, the BZG1.
 
That "Power Drive" was a joke.


So far I have come across mains-only on-camera electronic flashes from Japan, GDR and USSR.
 
I'm still trying to find out how exactly this camera works but If you mean a "winder" the "powerdrive" is no joke. Though this camera can run on batteries too.
 
I thought of an imaginary super motor drive that only would run on mains... Heroe of Labour
 
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Text deleted posted in error
 
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The Praktica LLC, PLC3 etc use the discontinued V21 PX 4.5 volt batteries, although you can buy replacements from battery companies which are quite expensive at £9 or so a go.

What I did was make a cell holder from the barrel of an old felt tip, a spring and three LR44 cells taped together, cost less than £1. :smile: and it works.

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I do like simple answer for a problem inflicted upon us by the manufacturers.
 
I take my hat off to a Praktica appreciation thread that has run to 29 pages, But I'm not one of them.
 
Quote : I take my hat off to a Praktica appreciation thread that has run to 29 pages, But I'm not one of them.

You're not one of the 29 pages ???



Part 2 of the mystery camera : the remote control switch.

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Well,

I've no idea darthj we need more clues.


30 pages now :smile:
 
I'm clueless too. That remote switch is seemingly from another era than that Euro-plug, what I find puzzling.

That switch looks like intended for a slide projector (forward move and focusing).
 
I thought it was for a slide projector too :confused: Or a remote for an auto winder, which I don't think it is.
 
This is the Transfo or "Netzteil" in German. I have censored its name/number because you would just google-cheat for it. It should be rather obvious by now that this camera is not very mobile, not to mention rather static. Oh, clue ...

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Well, now it seems that switch and that plug belong to each other. Which does not make sense, so I guess they don't.

Censoring: I don't even know that remaining logo...


EDIT: I found out about the transformer manufacturer, but am still puzzled.
 
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The original mains supply was adjustable from 6-12V. Yours is modified by setting the rheostat at 9V, taking off the knob and drilling out the the other two marks.
But that does not make us wiser either.
 
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