World´s fastest camera

163 nanoseconds per frame. WOW! 6 Million Frames Per Second. That is almost 4 times faster than the fastest 35mm camera that I've had my hands on. But it was made in 1960.
 
The advantages of working in a Research Lab. This camera was bought in 1960 for $120,000. Beckman and Whitley cameras are still in use, and this one was being refurbished. The Helium Turbine is used to spin a prism, which is used to expose the stationary strip of 35mm film. It is layed out on a Drum, and each frame is illuminated with a fast strobe light synchronized to the spinning prism.
 
Sounds like a pigtailed photo-detector on the end of a fiber with a 6Mhz A/D convertor, and a bunch of them running in parallel. So if the fiber bundle is run to a camera back such as an NPC Polaroid Camera Back for the Nikon F2,

http://cgi.ebay.com/Nikon-F2-Polaro...5|66:2|65:12|39:1|240:1318|301:1|293:1|294:50

Then each pigtailed fiber run to the A/D convertor, set the Nikon F2 to "T", hit the data acquisition button- Whammo. Hook up a frame buffer and the solid state recorder.
 
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