Hi Bob - the 1926 is one of the box type - as I said, unbranded but a search 
for similar styles of box camera gave a couple of very close matches.  I 
suspect that there were multiple variations around the fittings to the standard 
box due to supply issues or minor changes to them.

I just recalled I also have some Spotmatics, an ESII, a KMD and an ME, most of 
which work.


John in Brisbane


-----Original Message-----
From: Bob Pdml <[email protected]> 
Sent: Monday, 13 December 2021 9:58 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Vintage Cameras was: Fulvia ... Almost Home - GDG


> On 12 Dec 2021, at 23:42, [email protected] wrote:
> 
> Godfrey's mention of his ancient cameras leads me to wonder who else likes 
> collecting these engineering beauties?
> I'll start with a Rolleicord from 1955, a Fed 4L from 1969,  and of course an 
> SV from 1967. Of no great quality, to say the least, I inherited from my 
> mother a number of box cameras, some branded as Kodak and others not.  One I 
> think I have dated to 1926, would still work, and it was made in England!
> 
> John in Brisbane

Most of us are of an age when the cameras we bought new are now vintage…

What is your 1926 English camera?

Somewhere in the family we have my father’s camera which he bought used in 1956 
for the Melbourne Olympics - it was twenty years old at the time. An Agfa of 
some sort, very difficult to use. My oldest is a 1958 Leica M3. Not 
particularly old by Leica standards. After that it’s the MX I bought new in 
1979, which brings me back to the first sentence…

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