Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/04/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>>The model I was not permitted to be exported by the MacArthur >>Occupational Government, because of the format being 24mmX32mm Their >>logic was that it wouldn't be mountable in Kodaks brand new Kodachrome >>mounts, and American consumers would feel cheated. > >Would you happen to have a written source for this? Interesting, if true, >though military sources do not seem to back it up. (There was "free trade" >between the US and Japan from 1 January 46 onwards.) Marc, Pardon me for jumping in, but went and looked up some things this morning, after this discussion started. The following is from _The Evolution of the Japanese Camera_, the catalog of an exhibit (mid-1980s) put on by the International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House. It was sponsored by the Japan Camera and Optical Instruments Inspection and Testing Institute, and pretty much all of the Japanese camera companies. A Photographer's Place has copies for sale. This is the introduction to the post-war era, on page 34: "In the years immediatly following the Second World War, the Japanese camera industry cocentrated on the struggle to rebuild. Extreme shortages of essential materials imposed severe limitations on both the quality and quantity of cameras that could be produced. As shortages eased, production increased and a steady stream of cameras begain to appear. Designs introduced after the war varied little or not at all from pre-war models. The effort to rebuild the basic plant took precedence ove the creation of new models. The market at this time wa primarily domestic, plus the Allied occupation forces. There were not organized export efforts, and thd Japanese-made cemeras that did find their way to this country were generally brought home by returning servicemen. "During this period, an issue of great importance to the industry was resolved. The world standard 24 x 36mm format for 35mm photography had not been accepted by all Japanese manufacturers. Several companies began to produce cameras with a non-standard smaller format. The smaller format was popular in Japan because it reduced film costs, and could be enlarged without cropping to several standard paper sizes. However, it was incompatable with processing equipment in place in North America and Europe. Under pressure from the occupational authorities, the companies agreed to change to the standard 24 x 36mm format. The recognition and resolution of this problem took place over a very short period of time, so only a handful of cameras were built to the non-standard format." > (There was "free trade" between the US and Japan from 1 January 46 onwards.) This is from page 36, under the listing for the Nikon I (this was 1948): "The Nikon Model I was a high quality product incorporating a number of advanced features. It had full lens interchangeability and a combined high and low shutter speed dial. Like the Minolta 35, it had a 24 x 32 mm format that could not be exported because of compatability problems. The Allied Occupying Forces required that the format be changed to 24 x 36 mm to make it compatable with standard processing equipment. It was eventually succeeded by a model (the Nikon S-2) with a standard 24 x 36 mm format." Another tidbit you might find interesting, Marc: there is a list in the section on Nippon Kogaku, of eight German engineers who were brought in to "advance the optical technogy." This was shortly after the company was formed by the merger of two optical companies and a glass company. The engineers stayed for 5 years starting in 1921. They were: Max Lang, optical design Hermann Dillmann, optical computing Ernst Bernick, mechanical engineering Heinrich Acht, product design and drafting Otto Stange, product design and drafting Adolf Sadtler, lens grinding and polishing Karl Weise, lens grinding and polishing Alber Ruppert, prism grinding and polishing Acht stayed on, and designed the first lenses that Nippon Kogaku produced. - - Paul