JohnTF
Veteran
- Local time
- 5:23 PM
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2008
- Messages
- 2,083
The Kodak Signet Series were American made cameras. It was in the $100 price range, as expensive as the contemporary Kodak Retina Auto III. The Auto III is better made. However, the Signet 80 has some interesting features such as the "Spool-less" take up chamber, double-stroke thumb wind, and quick-release bayonet mount. I find the latter to be well thought out. The viewfinder is 1x, and accurate. The lenses are "okay". I've thought of hacking some better lenses onto the mount.
Brian, am pretty sure they were more than that, I recall we paid more. The lens mount had some sort of release and then the lens pulled out as I recall, I think they had three lenses. I may have a manual somewhere if you are without, just don't hold your breath. ;-)
The Signet 50 had no RF, and a blazing fast 2.8 lens, plus linked aperture and shutter speed, with EV numbers on top, so if you wanted to know the f stop and speed, you had to turn the camera over.
Still, you learn distances, and it was my first camera that could be adjusted.
The viewfinder was very clear, and said "wind" when the film was not advanced.
As these were made in the 60's, looking back, you could easily have bought a used S2 Nikon or Leica SM, and Kodak always seemed to make stuff that matched nothing else, and did not have a long production run, both of which made them difficult to service.
I did pick up some S2 Nikons for $125, sold them, and had seller's remorse, so I replaced them in the 70's for not much more.
+1 on your shot BTW.
Regards, John
ps- found a link on Camerapedia on it: http://www.camerapedia.org/wiki/Kodak_Signet_80
Interesting it was the last interchangeable lens US 35mm camera, was $130.
Last edited: