Super Ikonta C 531/2

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theoria

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I recently bought a Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta C 531/2 with a Tessar 105 3.5 and a Compur-Rapid shutter. According to this page the camera was manufactured in 1950. The thing that still puzzles me is that the lens is stamped"Carl Zeiss Jena". Wasn't it manufactured in Oberkochen, or is it just a brand name that came to be used in the west immediately after WWII?
Though I bought the camera mainly as a decoration item, I plan to shoot with it occasionally, and therefore a coated post WWII lens would be a great bonus.
BTW, has anyone had any experience with some version of this camera/lens? How does it compare to similar cameras of its age?

Many thanks,
Bogdan
 

Ian Grant

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There was still some co-operation between CZJ and Zeiss West Germany until 2 or 3 years later. So if it says Jena it's an East German lens. The two halves of the company still hoped to re-unite in 1950, and CZJ were still making lenses for the West although there were some quality issues. Zeiss (West) used the name Opton for a time to show these were there own lenses although it's thought a few were still from CZJ but passed through Oberkochens quality control first.

I have a 1952 (approx) 150mm f4.5 CZJ Tessar T coated, and it's a very good lens, the same lens was supplied to Linhof until the East severed the ties between the two companies.

Welcome to APUG BTW :D

Ian
 

premo

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I had a 6X6 version of the Ikonta from the late forties, CZJena in a compur. Very sharp.
 

Andy38

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Not sure this lens is coated...
The page you mention is unfinished : I have a pre-WWII 531/2 with an uncoated f3,5 CZJ Tessar and a Compur Rapid.
An other 531/2 with f3,5 Novar exists and I have seven different 530/2 models (I think there are more...).
When you receive your camera, please tell us what is the version.

I have made some rolls with coated (f3,5 Zeiss Opton-531/2) and uncoated (f4,5 CZJ Tessar_530/2) lenses : when the camera is in a good working condition, the results are very good.
 
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Ian Grant

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If the camera is post WWII then the factory fitted Tessar's were all coated, Zeiss started coating some Tessars before WWII there was a T coated 150mm for sale last year with a 1938 serial number.

The lens and Compur shutter serial numbers will give a good indication of when it was made.

Ian
 

Andy38

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The lens of mine was made in 1938, with serial number 2287xxx.

Before taking pics, try to see if rangefinder is adjusted, if lens infinite is correct with rf; I have often noticed it's not...
 
OP
OP

theoria

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Thanks Andy for pointing out that issue about the rangefinder. Good to know its quirks, and go beyond fixing the obvious holes in the bellows. Do you have scans of pictures taken with some of the Ikontas in your collection, so that I could have a standard for what the camera is capable? I am prepared to take it to a specialist to do precision restoration work, if needed, but I don't want to chase an image quality that might not be achievable. I must confess, I've never shot a camera that old (except maybe for my grandfather's Agfa Box, when I was a kid). My oldest lens is a 65mm Zeiss Jena Flektogon for P6, manufactured in the mid-sxties, which is still quite a capable piece of photographic equipment. I feel this camera is going to be fun...

B.
 

jp80874

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Thanks Ian,

I just received a pre WWII 6x9 cm Welta Weltur from Jurgen Kreckel certo6. So far I have not found a serial number on the body. The link to the serial number listing you gave helped me date the Compur Rapid shutter as early 1939 and Carl Zeiss Jena f4.5 uncoated Tessar as late 1937. The lens must have sat in someone’s inventory for a while until the rest of the camera was put together just before Blitz Krieg started. Thanks for helping identify an approximate build date.

John Powers
 

Ian Grant

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It's quite common for the shutter & lens dates to differ by a year or two, obviously manufacturers bought them in batches and some sat on shelves longer than others as you say.

Ian
 

jp80874

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It's quite common for the shutter & lens dates to differ by a year or two, obviously manufacturers bought them in batches and some sat on shelves longer than others as you say.

Ian

"Just in Time" logistics were 50 years away.

John
 

André E.C.

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As stated previously, if it says Jena it's East, Opton or just Carl Zeiss, it's West.
Jenas can be great, better optically than the Western ones even, so, choose wisely and you will be rewarded!:wink:
 

Andy38

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Thanks Andy for pointing out that issue about the rangefinder. Good to know its quirks, and go beyond fixing the obvious holes in the bellows. Do you have scans of pictures taken with some of the Ikontas in your collection, so that I could have a standard for what the camera is capable? I am prepared to take it to a specialist to do precision restoration work, if needed, but I don't want to chase an image quality that might not be achievable. I must confess, I've never shot a camera that old (except maybe for my grandfather's Agfa Box, when I was a kid). My oldest lens is a 65mm Zeiss Jena Flektogon for P6, manufactured in the mid-sxties, which is still quite a capable piece of photographic equipment. I feel this camera is going to be fun...
B.

Sorry, I haven't found scans from my Ikontas (I hope they aren't lost...).
I remember that B&W pics of my (coated) 531/2 were excellent.
But these cameras aren't easy to use, with too small viewfinders, IMHO.
 

Jojje

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This one is shot with a 1937 uncoated Tessar. F 4 if my memory serves me right - heavy overcast day. Slightly front-focus.
 

Jojje

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Thank you! (Of course much better when printed...)
This Tessar is uncoated but I seldom put a lens hood on.
Must try colour some time.
Additionally I do own an Ercona I with a multicoated Tessar. It is of course "a DDR-made Ikonta" from the period when the Zeiss name couldn't be used anymore. Very good performer but shutter needs attention and I rarely need 6x9.
 
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