Kodak designed and built the "APOLLO LUNAR SURFACE CLOSE-UP CAMERA". It was a stereo camera with electronic flash. It used 35mm Ektachrome MS Film in a special metal magazine.
View attachment 95481
My first full-time job at Kodak was working on this. I graduated from RIT in March 1969 and started work immediately. In July the camera was carried to the Moon, used, film removed and the camera left on the Lunar Surface. I made sure that I handled each of the cameras delivered to NASA in order to make sure I handled the ones that were going to be left on the Lunar Surface. I was just a "kid" at the time.
Bob Shanebrook
www.makingKODAKfilm.com
That's pretty darned kewl.![]()
So, there were dozens of cameras, 35mm and 120 that were made, tested and discarded. Only one fit the criteria and that one left behind many interesting stories.
Interesting;I had one of these Practicas in 1972.It didn't survive a month in my hands(the shutter stopped working after about 500 actuation)maybe just bad luck but, I went to Nikon FMs after that and never looked back;the lens wasn't all that bad though.-) Practica EE2
Dead Link Removed
-) Ansco
-) Contarex
I'm going to take a guess here before PE answers the question posed in post #16. I contend that the Hasselblads were chosen for the Apollo landings for reason of largest possible negative coupled with most exposures per load. Actually, the Hasselblad is a very good camera. As one who seems to unwittingly have become self-specialized in working on them, they do have points of engineering that cause question, but there are other areas that are brilliantly simplistic. But for short bursts of time between examinations/adjustments, they are as dependable an an anvil. For the Apollo missions, they only had to work perfectly for 10 days or so at the time. And to be sure, there was no comparable camera in existence on this planet at the time for use on the flight mission.
So I guess ten days use is why NASA treated them as disposable cameras... leaving them on the moon. Hey, I just had a thought. I wonder what one of those cameras would be worth if brought back by some future mission, if there ever is one and keeping all the moon dust on it.![]()
I've seen pictures of one of the OM models outfitted with a pistol grip for use on NASA missions.
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |