searchspell:minoltacorrected for konica minolta
The Famous Old Konica Colourwheel Logo Konica was a Japanese manufacturer of (among others) film, film cameras, camera accessories, photographic and photo-processing equipment, photocopiers, fax machines and laser printers. The company traced its history back to 1873 when pharmacist Rokusaburo Sugiura began selling photographic materials at his store. On August 5, 2003, Konica merged with Minolta to form Konica Minolta.
HistoryThis section is a stub. You can help by adding to it.ProductsThis section is a stub. You can help by adding to it.FilmKonica was a major producer of 35mm film and related products, including film development processors and printing technology. While never equal to giants like Kodak or Fuji, Konica film was generally acknowledged to be of excellent quality. Cameras35mm Rangefinder
F-mount SLRsThe first series of Konica single-lens reflex cameras used the Konica F lens mount, named after the first camera to use it. This was a bayonet mount, and is not compatible with later Konica lens mounts. The flange-to-film distance of the F-mount was 40.5 mm, one of the smallest ever used for a 35 mm SLR. The diameter was 40 mm. It is not identical with Nikon_F-Mount, which has a much longer flange-film distance of 46.5 mm.
AR-mount SLRsKonica's second series of SLR cameras began with 1965's Auto-Reflex. This line came to an end in 1987 when Konica abandoned the SLR market. Konica's AR lens mount kept the same flange-film distance that the earlier Konica F lens mount had (40.5 mm), but it has a larger diameter of 47 mm.
LensesKonica SLR interchangeable lenses were named Hexanon. The optical quality of most Hexanon lenses is regarded as truly superb, particularly the older fixed-focal length (prime) lenses. Many camera manufactureres of interchangeable lenses produce a few great lenses among their line, but Konica managed to achieve near excellent quality over a broad range of focal lengths. In lens tests conducted by several photographic publications over the years, the acutance and resolving power of Hexanon optics often surpassed many of their competitors at the time, and excellent even today (providing they haven't been abused or worn out). See also
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