The Uncommon RF Camera: Taron 35

raid

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I have finally completed one roll of film with my Taron 35 rangefinder camera. It is not a commonly found camera.

It is made by Nihon Kosokki Co.Ltd (Japan), and it sports a 45mm/2.8 Lausar, made by the Tamioka Optical Co.

When I first saw the name Taron, I thought of Tamron. Then I saw Nihon, and of course, I thought of Nikon.

The shutter speeds go from B to 300, and the aperture settings go from 2.8 to 16.

The shape of the camera is classical, and its built quality is not bad at all. The rangefinder is dim, but maybe it can be cleaned up.



RFTaron5.jpg


RFTaron24.jpg



Here are more photos:

http://www.photo.net/photodb/folder?folder_id=745541


Raid
 
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Wonderful photos, Raid (and, again, such cute kids).

That camera's "form factor" has me thinking of several cameras at once, mostly Nikon, of course, which makes matters here all the more mysterious. Might need to call up the Bartender for some info (as well as order another round...been a hot day around here). :)


- Barrett
 
amateriat said:
Wonderful photos, Raid (and, again, such cute kids).

That camera's "form factor" has me thinking of several cameras at once, mostly Nikon, of course, which makes matters here all the more mysterious. Might need to call up the Bartender for some info (as well as order another round...been a hot day around here). :)


- Barrett

Thank you Barrett.

Someone suspects a similarity in shape to a Nikon S. I don't know, but maybe if we go back to the origins of the Nihon company we may find some clues.


Raid
 
By the way, I used ASA 400 Walgreens film that was advertised for 99 cents a roll.

Raid
 
From what I have found searching the internet, if all the owners of Taron and their house branded cameras posted here, there still would only be a page or two. I have a Burstein-Applebee "AUTO" EE-1 that was made by Taron. I'm still working on the first roll, but I like the way it handles.
 
I've seen picture of 70ies era Taron RF with 2.8/45mm-something lens. Interesting to see that Taron has deeper roots.
 
They can't have been that scarce - I own a Taron 35 as well. While Taron labelled ones are a bit of a curiosity, they seem to have been not altogether small as a OEM, I've run across quite a few that were Fodor or Porst labelled.
 
Googling Taron 35 will not give you many active hits.
It is a basic camera that has an OK lens.
 
I've got one as well, with the faster lens too.

The problem with a lens called "Lausar", is that it sounds too much like "lousy" or "loser".
 
I stumbled across a Taron Robin 19 (export version of the Taron 35 III aka Taron MX from what I can tell). There doesn't seem to be much info around on this camera at all.

It feels like a nicely built camera, f1.9 lens (8 blade aperture version), 1-1/500. It also has a rather contrasty patch for a fixed lens rangefinder. It looks like it uses a prism instead of a mirror for the rangefinder. I'm not terribly familiar with rangefinder construction but I haven't seen that in other fixed lens rangefinders. I'm guessing the prism is part of the reason why it is so bright?

I'm working on loosening the prism assembly right now as the prism isn't rotating. After starting out in rangefinders with compact ones, these larger cameras aren't as appealing but this one definitely has a certain charm.

Anyone familiar with the model?
 
Tarons are orphaned obscure '50's Japanese rangefinders that are, among others like Aires/Beauty's/Royal, kind of interesting. I have a Taron III, a Robin 1.9 (III clone) and Robin Super LM (Taron VL clone). I kept the III because of its neato rewind lever. And the Robin 1.9 does has a very nice aperture iris.

And yeah, under the top cover of these is interesting too: robustly built with a mix of qualities with that prism and then the craft paper light block. Brian, a very small drop of oil under the circular holder for the prism (needled right at the body casting) and a little working the holder back and forth should free up the rangefinder.

I added to the Camerapedia entries for Taron, the III and VL; you can try there for some info. Unfortunately there is little information available on most of these orphaned obscure '50's rangefinders (which gives an excuse to buy 'em, try 'em and post info/photos on 'em on that site).
 
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