zuiko85
Veteran
It has occurred to me that *probably* the longest production of any camera has been the basic, black, Holga 120/120n model, 37 years.
Just find it ironic that a plastic toy camera has attained that distinction.
I believe that may even beat the production records of some FSU cameras.
Just find it ironic that a plastic toy camera has attained that distinction.
I believe that may even beat the production records of some FSU cameras.
webOSUser
Well-known
The Argus C3 was in production from 1939 to 1966. About 2 million copies. That may be number two.
Steve W
Steve W
Disappointed_Horse
Well-known
The Pentax K1000 is up there too; over three million produced during its 21 year production run from 1976–1997.
nickthetasmaniac
Veteran
Yeah I was going to suggest the K1000 too.
Depending on how you define a 'model', the Hasselblad SWC would be up there. No significant change to the lens from 1954 to 2001, and no significant change to the body from 1956 to 2001.
Depending on how you define a 'model', the Hasselblad SWC would be up there. No significant change to the lens from 1954 to 2001, and no significant change to the body from 1956 to 2001.
Takkun
Ian M.
Not quite up there, but I was amazed when I found out the Nikon F3 went from 1980 to around 2002, or so says Wikipedia.
The Cosina-made FM10 even has that beat, at 24 years. Still sold (at over $500!), according to their website.
The Cosina-made FM10 even has that beat, at 24 years. Still sold (at over $500!), according to their website.
zuiko85
Veteran
Yeah I was going to suggest the K1000 too.
Depending on how you define a 'model', the Hasselblad SWC would be up there. No significant change to the lens from 1954 to 2001, and no significant change to the body from 1956 to 2001.
Thanks for the heads up on the SWC. Never knew it was made for so long a period of time.
And, like the Holga, same film and 6X6 format. But opposite ends of the quality spectrum.
zuiko85
Veteran
By the by folks, I'm not dismissing the Holga. In the hands of photographers like Michael Kenna and David Burnett the results are stunning.
David Hughes
David Hughes
Difficult to answer as the criteria isn't very fixed but the first Leica in commercial production was 1925 and it ended in 1960 as the IIIg but some were still being assembled/sold by Leitz in 1970.
Then the Olympus OM started in 1972 and ran to 1997.
And the Leica (1925) became the FED (in 1936) and Zorki and the Zorki became the Zenit and that ended in 2004 as the KM Plus.
And there's the Olympus Trip 35...
Regards, David
Then the Olympus OM started in 1972 and ran to 1997.
And the Leica (1925) became the FED (in 1936) and Zorki and the Zorki became the Zenit and that ended in 2004 as the KM Plus.
And there's the Olympus Trip 35...
Regards, David
zuiko85
Veteran
Difficult to answer as the criteria isn't very fixed but the first Leica in commercial production was 1925 and it ended in 1960 as the IIIg but some were still being assembled/sold by Leitz in 1970.
Then the Olympus OM started in 1972 and ran to 1997.
And the Leica (1925) became the FED (in 1936) and Zorki and the Zorki became the Zenit and that ended in 2004 as the KM Plus.
And there's the Olympus Trip 35...
Regards, David
Yep, those were all long production runs. However my thoughts ran more to a single model. The Leica started with a fixed lens, then gradually, interchangeable lenses, built in coupled RF, etc. Therefore, I would think of the entire III family, from the A to the G could be considered the same model, with improvements along the way. That would be a very long run indeed.
David Hughes
David Hughes
Hi,
Yes, I would have said that but wondered about minor changes.
F'instance the Leica standard ran from 1932 to 1950.
As for the III's there's ling and short versions. The longer die cast body from 1940 as the IIIc but complicated by the (smaller) III running from 1938 to '41 and then a small batch in 1946.
Looking at the OM-1's does the OM-1n count as a 1? So lots of interesting details to sort out. OTOH the OM ran a long time with minor changes and bigger metering changes.
And then there's the size of the production (largest) versus the years it ran (longest)...
Regards, David
Yes, I would have said that but wondered about minor changes.
F'instance the Leica standard ran from 1932 to 1950.
As for the III's there's ling and short versions. The longer die cast body from 1940 as the IIIc but complicated by the (smaller) III running from 1938 to '41 and then a small batch in 1946.
Looking at the OM-1's does the OM-1n count as a 1? So lots of interesting details to sort out. OTOH the OM ran a long time with minor changes and bigger metering changes.
And then there's the size of the production (largest) versus the years it ran (longest)...
Regards, David
Canyongazer
Canyongazer
and at the opposite end of the size spectrum...
737 airplane ... Boeing sold the first one to Lufthansa in 1968 and it is still in production.
In between in size but not longevity:
The Porsche 911 - introduced in 1963 it, too, is still in production.
737 airplane ... Boeing sold the first one to Lufthansa in 1968 and it is still in production.
In between in size but not longevity:
The Porsche 911 - introduced in 1963 it, too, is still in production.
D
Deleted member 65559
Guest
Zuiko, I'm not sure what status that would bestow on the Holga. But the Deardorff view camera was made from 1923-88. Rolleiflex from 1920 on. It can be debated that any changes were improvements to the basic engineering idea....
Erik van Straten
Veteran
The M Leica was made from 1954 until now, production continues, 65 years.
Erik.
Erik.
css9450
Veteran
Now we're getting silly here...
D
Deleted member 65559
Guest
Dan Daniel
Well-known
YashicaMat went from 1957 to 1986. Different models added meters but that's about it. Sort of the Pentax K1000 of medium format.
David Hughes
David Hughes
And to go with them the Kodak 120 and 35mm films and, of course, the Tessar.
Regards, David
Regards, David
It has occurred to me that *probably* the longest production of any camera has been the basic, black, Holga 120/120n model, 37 years.
Was it always made by the same people? I sort of remember a change in who made them... or was that the Diana?
Pál_K
Cameras. I has it.
and at the opposite end of the size spectrum...
737 airplane ... Boeing sold the first one to Lufthansa in 1968 and it is still in production.
In between in size but not longevity:
The Porsche 911 - introduced in 1963 it, too, is still in production.
Hmmm... The original 737 had those odd looking engines. What about Cessna 152, 172?
As for the 911, the last air-cooled "911" (dubbed the 993) was around 1996 or so. All current models are water cooled.
Then there's John Moses Browning's M1911 - essentially unchanged for 108 years.
What about a 49-year run for the Hasselblad 500C and variations (1957-2006):
https://www.hasselblad.com/history/500-series/
zuiko85
Veteran
I think the question would be;Hi,
Yes, I would have said that but wondered about minor changes.
F'instance the Leica standard ran from 1932 to 1950.
As for the III's there's ling and short versions. The longer die cast body from 1940 as the IIIc but complicated by the (smaller) III running from 1938 to '41 and then a small batch in 1946.
Looking at the OM-1's does the OM-1n count as a 1? So lots of interesting details to sort out. OTOH the OM ran a long time with minor changes and bigger metering changes.
And then there's the size of the production (largest) versus the years it ran (longest)...
Regards, David
If you had been shooting for a time with a IIIa then pick up a IIIG it would be instantly familiar, operating the same controls in the same manner. Sure, the eyepieces were moved next to each other, and flash sync was added, and the 90mm vf was added, but essentially they operate almost identically.
Same thing applies to the OM-1 and 1n, basic operation is preserved.
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