![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|||
![]() |
||||
Prior to the mid-30s Kodak had purchased most of its lens from other manufacturers. An impressive early 'industrial park' of photographic manufacturers had grown up in Rochester, some of which were responsible for supplying lens stock to Kodak. The history of these firms and their relation to Kodak is recorded by Rudolf Kingslake, Kodak's Director of Optical design. As part of Kodak's business strategy in the mid-30s to increase its market share of the emerging advanced amateur/professional market, the company undertook a program to increase its R&D and improve its manufacturing skills. This is described in the Kodak prospectus for the Ektra. The optical part of this expansion program is outlined in Kingslake's, Lens in Photography. Using largely established lens formulae, Kodak designed new lenses for several new cameras that would be introduced in the seven year period starting in 1935. Kodak research was revealing new glass formulae and exploring surface coating materials and mechanical designs that would reduce internal reflections. In the 1930s most Kodak lenses were
called simply Anastigmats; the lineage of Kodak lenses is documented on
another page
The Ektar made its debut in 1936 on a Kodak Bantam Special as an uncoated 6-element f /2 "Kodak Anastigmat Ektar". By 1940, a 14-inch f /6.3 Eastman Ektar in a Tessar design and a 107mm f /3.7 Ektar in a modified Tessar design, had been added for professional work. Two outstanding new cameras were introduced in 1941 to match the optical quality of the Ektars--the Kodak Ektra with six new interchangeable Ektar lenses and the Kodak Medalist , a new rigid-bodied coupled-rangefinder design for 2.xx x 3.xx film that mounted a new 100mm f /3.5 Ektar of a Heliar design. In the design, production and marketing of this new line, Kodak emphasized:
A less publicly proclaimed goal, but one that is clear from the development of Kodak product lines, is the recognition of a new consumer class--the prosumer--that could be developed between the existing "press the button and Kodak does the rest" market and the professional market. While individual product features changed over the roughly 20 year period surveyed here, the strategic goals remained in place until post-WWII competitive pressures eroded Kodak's market. The Ektar program was started when C. W. Frederick was head of the optical department at Kodak. Rudolf Kingslake may have had some direct involvement with Ektar design but does not mention this in his books. He does directly credit F. E. Altman with the design of the 100mm f/3.5 Ektar used on the Medalist and the f/3.3 Ektar wide angle for the Ektra, and presumably Altman was involved in the design of many of the other Ektars. Kingslake also reports that Willy E. Schade, who joined Kodak in 1932, was "the designer of many of their (Kodak's) best lenses," so we can assume he was involved in the Ektar program. While Ektars were, in principle, the best lens Kodak could market, for their intended purposes, they were not equally good in a given situation, if only because the designs were not equally mature or successful. Since lens interchangeability had not been a significant feature in the Kodak consumer product line, the suitability of particular designs wasn't emphasized in Kodak marketing until it introduced the Ektra and began creating specialized designs for press and view cameras about 1940. Then, even in the premium Ektar lines, the design trade offs between fast lenses, like the Ektra Ektar f /1.9 50mm and slower lenses, like the Ektra Ektar f /3.5 50mm lens became apparent. Color emulsions had been developed
in the mid-1930s and optical research and production targetted better
color performance. Improvement in lateral color correction were major
design goals in the Ektar program. Zeiss had developed an effective lens
coating procedure for its lenses in 1935 and offered its first lenses
in 1937. The history of Kodak's early lens coating is detailed on another
page With the end of WWII, Kodak, like
other industries turned its productive capacity to consumer goods. Lens
coating became an initiative across product lines. While German and Japanese
manufacturer were still digging out from war damage, Kodak had apparently
decided by 1948, and perhaps much earlier, that I did not want to extend
the Ektra experiment. While Bantam folders were produced until 1953, production
of the Bantam Special ended in 1948. The Medalist II with a coated lens
and synchronized shutter replaced the original Medalist in 1946 and continued
in production to 1953. The Medalist was replaced by the Chevron
Kodak offered a broad range of Ektars
mounted in Kodak, Compur and Ilex shutters for use on press and view cameras.
Commercial Ektar's Many of the Graflex MF/LF reflex
cameras Kodak's earlier enlarger Ektars
were labelled Projection Ektars In any discussion of Ektar lenses,
the conversation will periodically vere into folklore, some of which is
based on fact and some on gossip embellished by fantasy. There were many
Ektar lenses designed and built that did not reach the consumer market
or some that did, but were not standard production. Kodak also served
the military and industrial market, where there has been and perhaps remains
documentation about these products. I deal with these variations in some
detail on pages titled, Ektar Anomolies,
though in some cases they are only anomolies to the consumer market. Kodak
also manufactured and distributed lenses for broadcast and industrial
cameras and where there are sometimes apparent similarities to lenses
in consumer lines, e.g. the kinship between Ektra Ektars and Television
Ektanons For more information on Ektar lens
design and performance see a page no longer available, but restored from
Robert Monaghan's Medium Format site |
Ektar Home Page | Kodak Lens Index | ||||
About Ektar lens data | Kodak Lens Lineage | ||||
Kodak Ektar Summary | Kodak Lens Coating | ||||
Kodak Lenses and Shutters © 1939‡ | Kodak Reference Handbook: Lenses, Rangefinders and Shutters section © 1940 | ||||
Kodak
Reference Handbook: Lenses, Rangefinders and Shutters section ©
1942, 1945 |
Data Book on Lenses, Shutters and Portra Lenses, for Revising Kodak Reference Handbook, © 1942, 1945; Second 1946 Printing | ||||
Kodak Data Book: Lenses, Shutters and Portra Lenses, Third Edition, (1948) | Kodak Data Book: Lenses, Shutters and Portra Lenses, Fourth Edition, (1952) | ||||
Kodak Data Book: Lenses, Shutters and Portra Lenses, Fourth Edition, (1955) | Kodak Professional Handbook, Equipment Section, (1952) | ||||
Kodak Data Book: Lenses, Shutters and Portra Lenses, Sixth Edition, (1958) | Kodak Lens Serial Numbers | ||||
Enlarging Lenses | |||||
‡ |
This booklet predates the first edition of the Kodak Reference Handbook and contains detailed information about many more lens models and considerable background information about Kodak lens design and production. Kodak issued replacement pages to registered owners of the original Kodak Reference Handbook which was published in a loose-leaf binder; the replacement pages contained updated information about new products and processes. Newer versions of the Handbook would have contained these pages. © dates in this material appear for 1940, 1942, 1943 and 1945 and perhaps other dates. One of the first separately bound Data Books was published in 1946 "For Revising Reference Handbooks," and noted as Second Printing. |
||||
![]() 08/03/2006 1:59 |
![]() |
.![]() |
|
09/26/2010 20:34
|