mooge
Well-known
Hey guys,
just thought I'd share this catalogue I found at school:




link to pdf here:
https://pdf.yt/d/8Bodc5JEPZ0RGXru
I know it's not really about cameras but maybe some of you might find it interesting.
Most of you probably know that Leitz was (is) a microscope manufacturer, this catalogue shows that they made quite a range of optical instruments for industry as well.
Most of these devices are unfamiliar to me (as they're pretty specialized), but I've used a profile projector / optical comparator (pp.45-48) before. Basically, you an object on the machine's glass table and the object can be lit from below (shadow/profile) or above (surface) to be viewed, magnified, on a screen. one use of the profile projector is to measure distances without contact - there are micrometer-like screws that move the table in X and Y, so you can line up a point on the object in the crosshairs and move to another point and determine the distance between or whatever - perfect for features that are impossible to measure with contact methods, like the tap (used for cutting threads) in the illustration on pp. 45.
cheers.
just thought I'd share this catalogue I found at school:




link to pdf here:
https://pdf.yt/d/8Bodc5JEPZ0RGXru
I know it's not really about cameras but maybe some of you might find it interesting.
Most of you probably know that Leitz was (is) a microscope manufacturer, this catalogue shows that they made quite a range of optical instruments for industry as well.
Most of these devices are unfamiliar to me (as they're pretty specialized), but I've used a profile projector / optical comparator (pp.45-48) before. Basically, you an object on the machine's glass table and the object can be lit from below (shadow/profile) or above (surface) to be viewed, magnified, on a screen. one use of the profile projector is to measure distances without contact - there are micrometer-like screws that move the table in X and Y, so you can line up a point on the object in the crosshairs and move to another point and determine the distance between or whatever - perfect for features that are impossible to measure with contact methods, like the tap (used for cutting threads) in the illustration on pp. 45.
cheers.
Ronald M
Veteran
I have a camera one from 1963. M3 + Summicron was high $400 range. Bender bags and all the insert included. Fun to look at and to use a reference for part numbers.