Last Friday at Brentwood Photographic Club I was given a
Chinon TTL marked 'Prinzflex' M42 fit lens and it's a F1.4 !! The donater had fitted a replacement battery BUT it needs the now-illegal
1.35 V Mercury one so will have to test readings --- I cleaned lens -- just in time as there were some Fungus flecks and renewed the back light seal strips so back door shuts better. I also took off baseplate and lubricated all the cogs and pivots i could see with minute amount of sewing machine oil -- Now the delayed action is so QUIET you can hardly hear it !
It has shutter speeds 1 sec - 1/1000th, 'X' and 'M' flash synch plugs .
Chinon TTL Prinzflex by
Peter Elgar, on Flickr
You're gonna move me with this! The
Chinon TTL "Prinzflex" was (well, still is...) my father's camera, and consequently the first reflex I used. Dad also ranked at some photo contests with pictures taken with this camera. As a funny note, since the "Chinon" badge was usually covered by the
neverready case, as a kid I thought that Prinzflex was the the name of the brand, and I was always astonished about never seeing ads by this make! Only much later I understood, as anticipated by others, that this is a special version of the
Chinonflex TTL commissioned by and re-branded for a chain of shops. I am persuaded, although I can't prove it, that these cameras were bundled with one of those early japanese super-fast normal prime lenses, and your camera seems to confirm this. My father's is equipped with a
Super Reflecta 55mm f:1,4, which only lately surfaced was made by
Tomioka and sold under their "Reflecta" trademark (Tomioka made lenses also for Pentax, Mamiya and others). I believe that this Chinon dependable camera bundled with the super-fast lens made up an outstanding combo for its time at a very reasonable price.
I still like this camera very much - the peculiarity of the shutter speed control knob in front of the body, the lack of the flash hotshoe that yelds to a very clean design of the top, and so on. A very good-looking camera in my opinion. There is a close cousin of the Chinonflex which name is
Ricoh Singlex TLS; I have yet to understand if this was a joint-venture, or if Ricoh purchased the patents at a point, or the other way around.
Have fun with your Chinon! if it's your first M42 universal screw-thread mount camera, you have literally
a galaxy of lenses to explore and try out...