Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/12/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]this is a question that comes up often on the submini chat list. The earlier (until the latter part of the run of the Minox B) Minox cameras did indeed have a curved film plane and a curved pressure plate. The curve is very slight but noticable. This is to adjust for a slight curvature of the lens and, thus, allow for sharper negatives. As a user of these cameras I can testify that it works -- the negatives are wonderfully sharp. Some of the Minox enlargers also have a curved film plane, but this is in no way related to the camera. The two are totally independent optical systems. It is, again, to allow for a slight curvature of the Minox enlarger lens -- in otherwords, it is correcting for an uncorrected fault in the enlarger lens so that the wonderfully sharp negative stays sharp in the final print. They can do this because the Minox enlarger lens is not removable -- it is fixed to the enlarger and not meant to be changed. Does the curve in the camera and enlarger mean they were cheap lenses? No, it only means that they are so small, and manufacturing methods in 1937 were so difficult, that this was an easy way to make the final print sharp. The modern Minox cameras have flat field lenses. WHAT THIS MEANS IS -- Once you shoot film in any minox camera, whether it has a flat film plane (the new ones do) or a curved one, you can make wonderfully sharp prints in any enlarger because the negatives are already wonderfully sharp. I print wonderfully sharp 5 by 7 prints (I use Ilford Delta 100) using a Focomat Ic with a Nikor enlarging lens and the results are indestinguishable from prints shot with a 35 mm camera, say, such as a Leica. So, if this is the only reason you have not used a Minox, you may now proceed. WWW.subclub.org has sources of film for reloading cassettes and all kinds of helpful advice. www.minoxlab.com can sell you any of several new cameras, from the Minox IIIf/Leica (may be back ordered) for $400 to several other models of varying price up to $1000 for a TLX (highly recommended). Film and processing are also available from them and are rated very highly by the very fussy members of the submini chat group. I might add, I have a Minox/Leica IIIf as well as a couple of Minox Bs. It is somewhat limited, having only one shutter speed and f-stop (1/250@f 5.6) but is very good for outdoor shooting and I have been extremely impressed with the prints I have made from it. Extremely sharp. if you have any further questions please feel free to contact me off-line as this isn't really a Leica topic. charlie trentelman, aka summicron1@aol.com ogden utah In a message dated 12/6/0 1:05:08 AM, you wrote: > >> I've >> never done much with the 8x11 Minox format because their cameras have a >> curved film plate which requires a comparable curved negative holder in the >> enlarger. >Why so? If you use a flat field enlarging lens you use a flat negative >carrier. I have never heard of a curved field enlarging lens. The Minox 15 >taking lens was however a curved field lens with a curved film plate but >that is not what you use to enlarge the film with, surely?? > >Rs > >Adrian