Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/01/13
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Danny asks about the differences between the Retina IIIC, IIIc, and IIc. the were all folding 35mm cameras make by Kodak. The IIIc ("small c") had a built-in selenium meter and could accept interchangable front elements for 35 amd 80mm. It typically came with a 50mm f2 Xenon or Heligon. Later models had a high/low range on the meter instead of the typical little door that flipped down to partially cover the cell for the high range. The IIc was the same, without the meter and typically came with a 50mm f2.8 lens that was supposedly somewhat better than its f2 counterpart. Either could accept a clip on finder for the 35mm or 80mm lenses. The IIIC ("big C") added built-in bright-line frames for the 35mm, 50mm and 80mm, and in its final form, increased the film speeds the meter could handle from 1600 to 3200 ASA. The larger finder makes them more usable -- the II/IIIc finder is somewhat small and the IIIC's is just better. I can't recall if the frames were parallax-corrected or not. There was also a IIC, which was the same, without the meter and a f2.8 lens. All the Retinas are nice cameras. There is supposedly a cord or cable in the meter that can break and is expensive to repair when it does, and even though the IIIC finder is not as bright as an M3, they can be a lot of fun. Another LUGger make be able to shed more specifics on them. This is what I remember fron using them in the '60s. Bill