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When
open, a small curved indentation is
visible on the back of the camera.
Depressing it with the thumbnail will
release the back cover, allowing it to
slide open revealing the film chamber.
With the early models (A & B) the
film gate will close when the camera is
pulled completely open. The body must be
pushed closed SLIGHTLY ( you can see
the film gate open) to release the film.
With the film gate open and the cover
clear of the film cassette, the film
should fall out with a slight tap (on the
hand, NOT on the
table!).
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Today's automatic cameras are marvels of engineering and
do nearly everything for you, at a cost. The 8x11mm Minox
cameras are also marvels of craftsmanship, ingenuity, and
convenience, BUT also at a cost. The cost is minimal, but
important. You must load and unload the film
according to a proper procedure!
The cassette, shown without the covers and with
white paper for film, shows the film being pulled from the
supply chamber at the right and wound onto the take-up spool
at the left. The Minox has an ingenious mechanism which
maintains equal spacing between the frames, even though the
film on the take- up spool is increasing in diameter,
requiring less and less rotation of the drum with each film
advance.
For the camera to know the rotation needed for the "next"
frame, it must be told when a new roll has been loaded. You
must provide this information by ALWAYS loading a new
cassette in accordance with the instructions in the owners
manual. The frame counter (examples shown below) has a
"Loading Mark" in the form of a red DOT (or red BAR), and
MUST be so positioned before inserting a new roll of film.
PLEASE NOTE that the new Minocolor PRO film
for Minox 8x11mm is packaged in 30 exposure cassettes
(a new length), with special counter setting instructions,
for each camera style, included with each cassette.
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Minox Riga, III, IIIs, B
and some early Cs
- Frame counters start at zero and end at 50
(50 exposure film was discontinued in the late
60's).
- Counter indicates the number of EXPOSED
frames.
- You must remember the length
(exposure count) of the film you have loaded.
- After the last exposure, open and close the
camera only twice (see
below). Remove the film, THEN advance
the counter to the DOT in preparation
for a new roll of film.
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Minox C (later), BL,
LX/TLX and EC
- Frame counters start at 36 and DESCEND to
zero.
- Counter indicates the number of frames
REMAINING to be exposed.
- 36 exposure film loads must be inserted with
the counter set at the red DOT!
- Exposing the nominal number of frames should
bring the counter to zero.
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15 exposure film loads -
- must be inserted with the counter set at the
red BAR!
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If you use less than the nominal
number of frames, be sure to advance the
frame counter to the CORRECT POSITION before loading a
new cassette.
Knowing when to
START. The
"leader" of the film strip is, of course, exposed during
manufacture, as is the area between the chambers (with the
crescent shaped notch). Closing the camera after inserting
the cassette advances the film, BUT not enough to guarantee
an unexposed "first" frame. To insure an undamaged first
image, YOU MUST OPERATE THE WINDING MECHANISM
ONE MORE TIME, to get the counter to the
zero mark.
The film example shown is AgfaPan APX 25 which was
inserted into, and removed from, the camera in very low
light. Had it been fast film and subjected to bright light,
some leakage through the felt light trap would have damaged
the clear area rendering an important image, if placed
there, useless.
Knowing when to
STOP. It is
no accident that the DOT is two frames AFTER the end
of the film for which your model was designed (36 or 50
exposure). Advancing through two frames at the end of your
roll ensures that the last image will be safely protected
within the take-up chamber before exposing the cassette to
light. It also positions the mechanism for the insertion of
a new roll of film, without operating the winding mechanism
through a full count to get back to the load point.
The much more dangerous prospect is that advancing the
film too far, continuing until the tail of the film is drawn
into the take-up chamber, leaving the light trap empty and
less effective than designed. Always leave
film extending between the chambers to maintain the
integrity of the takeup chamber light trap!
So, load film at the "load
point" and stop at the proper "end point".
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