Canon FX

The Canon FX is a 35 mm SLR manufactured by Canon Inc. of Japan and introduced in April 1964. It introduced the Canon FL lens mount, the successor to the Canon R.[1]

Canon FX
Overview
Type35mm SLR
Lens
Lens mountCanon FL lens mount
Focusing
FocusManual
Exposure/metering
ExposureCadmium sulfide photocell (2 ranges)
Flash
FlashPC socket only
General
Dimensions141.5 × 91 × 86 mm, 900 g (with 50mm f/1.8)

The camera has a built-in lightmeter using a CdS photocell mounted on the photographer's left-hand side; unlike later cameras, it does not meter through the taking lens. A lever switched between low sensitivity for bright subjects (EV 9–18) and high sensitivity for dark subjects (EV 1-10) (at ISO 100). Film speeds supported are ISO 10 through 800.

The shutter is a horizontally-traveling focal plane shutter supporting speeds between 1/1000 and 1 second in full stop increments, selected by a dial on the top plate on the photographer's right. The X-sync speed for flash is 1/55 sec.; flash support was through a PC socket on the front of the body.

The viewfinder uses a glass pentaprism and gives coverage of 90% of the frame vertically and 93% horizontally, with a 0.9× magnification (with a 50 mm standard lens).

The FX was available with either silver or black metal parts. Obviously there could be a few hidden ones in cupboards and dens, however there were only two known all-black models until November 2014;There are now at least three, two are owned by a private collector in Indiana, USA and another one by a private collector in Koromilia, Kilkis, Greece.

Canon FX black Koromilia, Kilkis, Greece

References

  1. Canon Inc. "Canon FX". Canon Camera Museum. Archived from the original on 2012-10-04. Retrieved 2011-08-05.

Canon's new Museum site is https://global.canon/en/c-museum/ and the link to the Canon FX is https://global.canon/en/c-museum/product/film49.html

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.