Pentax
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Pentax Corporation ペンタックス株式会社 |
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Type | Corporation (TYO: 7750 ) |
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Founded | Tokyo, Japan (1919) |
Headquarters | Tokyo, Japan |
Key people | Fumio Urano, President & CEO |
Industry | Imaging |
Products | Cameras and photographic equipment; Binoculars, spotting scopes and telescopes; Medical fiberscopes and endoscopes; Medical fine ceramics products; Information and communications products; Component products; Industrial products; Eyeglass lenses |
Revenue | ![]() |
Employees | 1,661 (as of March 31, 2005; non-consolidated Pentax Corp. only) |
Slogan | for your precious moments |
Website | Pentax Worldwide Gateway |
Pentax Corporation (ペンタックス株式会社 Pentakkusu Kabushiki-gaisha?) (TYO: 7750 ) is a Japanese company founded in 1919 as Asahi Optical Joint Stock Co. (旭光学工業合資会社 Asahi Kōgaku Kōgyō Gōshi-gaisha?), spectacle lens manufacturers.
In 1938 it changed its name to Asahi Optical Co., Ltd. (旭光学工業株式会社 Asahi Kōgaku Kōgyō Kabushiki-gaisha?), and by this time it was also manufacturing camera/cine lenses. In the lead-up to World War II, Asahi Optical devoted much of its time to fulfilling military contracts for optical instruments. At the end of the war Asahi Optical was disbanded by the occupying powers, being allowed to re-form in 1948. The company resumed its pre-war activities, manufacturing binoculars and consumer camera lenses for Konishiroku and Chiyoda Kōgaku Seikō (later Konica and Minolta respectively). In 1952 Asahi Optical introduced its first camera, the Asahiflex (the first Japanese SLR using 35mm film). Since then the company has been primarily known for its photographic products. The company's photography products were imported to the United States from the 1950s until the mid 1970s by Honeywell Corporation and were labeled Honeywell Pentax rather than Asahi Pentax, the name by which they were distributed to the rest of the world. The company adopted its current name, 'Pentax Corporation', in 2002. Today it is one of the world's largest optical companies, producing still cameras, binoculars, and spectacle lenses as well as a variety of other optical instruments. In 2004 Pentax had about 6000 employees. Pentax is currently merging with Hoya Corporation into Hoya Pentax HD Corporation.[1] Hoya is to pay 0.158 of a share for each Pentax share. The acquisition will be completed by October 1, 2007.
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[edit] History
[edit] Products
The period around 1950 marked the return of the Japanese photographic industry to the vigorous level of the early 1940s, and its emergence as a major exporter. The newly reborn industry had sold many of its cameras to the occupation forces (with hugely more disposable income than the Japanese) and they were well received. The Korean War saw a huge influx of journalists and photographers to the Far East, where they were impressed by lenses from companies such as Nikon and Canon for their Leica rangefinder cameras, and also by bodies by these and other companies to supplement and replace the Leica and Contax cameras they were using. This was the background to the development of Asahi Optical's first camera.
[edit] The Screw mount cameras
[edit] The Asahiflex Series
Asahi Optical introduced its first 35 mm camera in 1952. Asahi was unusual in deciding to start with a high-quality 35mm camera that was not a copy of something else. Its designers were convinced of the inherent superiority of the SLR and so proceeded along these lines. This effort resulted in the Asahiflex I, which was also the first Japanese 35mm SLR.[2]
The Asahiflex I had a non-interchangeable waist-level viewfinder, with a direct optical viewfinder for eye-level use. The Asahiflex I had a non-returning mirror and shutter speeds from 1/25 to 1/500. The camera used the M37 screw mount. It went through some minor modifications for flash use, resulting in the IA. With the IIB a key advance was made: the quick-return mirror. The problem of mirror black-out was one of the main problems with prior SLR designs, greatly reducing usability and a major reason for the greater popularity of the rangefinder. With the IIB there emerged the first practical quick-return mirror, a vital innovation and one which was quickly adopted by other manufacturers. With the final model in the series, the IIA, the Asahiflex gained slow speeds from 1/25th of a second to 1/2 of a second.
- Asahiflex I (1952 - 1953)
- Asahiflex IA (1953 - 1954)
- Asahiflex IIB (1954 - 1956)
- Asahiflex IIA (1955 - 1957)
[edit] Asahi-Pentax Series (pre Spotmatic)
The Asahiflex was an excellent camera, but the market demanded more. The last drawback of the Asahiflex was that the camera lacked a pentaprism; it was very difficult to use the camera in a vertical position and taking pictures of moving objects was almost impossible. The small viewfinder on top of the camera was of little use when the photographer wanted to use a 135 mm or 500 mm lens. The problem was recognized by Asahi, and in 1957 Asahi Optical's first SLR in its modern form was introduced.
The Asahi Pentax is widely recognised as one of the pivotal SLR designs of the 20th century. The form and layout of the Asahi Pentax (often referred to by collectors as the 'AP') exerted tremendous influence over the next 30 years of SLR design. The AP was not necessarily technologically innovative: most of the technologies present had already been developed. What the AP represented, however, was the first time that the best SLR technologies of the time had been brought together in one compact package. As well as the inherent advantages of the SLR design, the AP incorporated instant mirror return, a hinged film back for easy loading and the now firmly established rapid thumb-wind advance on the right of the camera. Compared with the cameras of the time, the AP represented a breakthrough in convenience and usability. The AP dropped the M37 mount and instead utilised the M42 screw mount, first introduced with the German Contax S in 1949. The Asahi Optical lenses bore the 'Takumar' name and quickly gained a high reputation.
There is some confusion about the etymology of the name, some sources claim it was licensed from VEB Zeiss Ikon, and derived from the combination "PENTAprism" and "contaX". The explanation on pentax.com does not mention Contax or Zeiss Ikon, and states that the name was formed from "PENTAprism" and "refleX", being the reflex mirror of an SLR camera. A third variation substitutes "Asahiflex" for "reflex", which is at least logical as the Asahiflex cameras had waist-level viewfinders and therefore the pentaprism of the Asahi Pentax would have been a significant differentiating feature.
The AP went through various iterations until 1964. Each successive model incorporated minor improvements, the most noticeable being the incorporation of the two shutter speed dials (one for high speeds and one for low speeds) into one. The AP of 1957 is externally almost identical to the 1964 SV.
[edit] Spotmatic Series
However, by the 1960s the clamour for in-camera exposure metering was rising. It was possible to attach an external CdS (Cadmium sulfide) exposure meter to the later AP-derived models, but in 1960 the next breakthrough arrived. At the 1960 Photokina camera show, Asahi exhibited the Spot-matic prototype. This camera took exposure measurements, via a spotmeter, through the taking lens, an incredible innovation. The camera excited tremendous attention and in 1964 the first production Spotmatic (hyphen dropped) emerged. The Spotmatic was virtually identical to the prototype; however, the spotmeter was replaced with an all-over average-reading exposure meter in order to give more consistent results. The camera was an instant success and was snapped up by the thousand, although Asahi had been beaten into production by the Topcon RE Super which went on sale in April 1963; the Topcon failed to attract the same degree of commercial success.
In 1966 Asahi Optical had produced one million SLR cameras since the first Asahiflex of 1952. It took them only another three years, until 1969, to reach two million. This period was a time of complete pre-eminence for Asahi Optical. During the Spotmatic era Asahi were manufacturing more SLRs per month than all the other camera manufacturers combined. One of the technological highlights was the Electro-Spotmatic of 1971. This camera was one of the very first to incorporate automatic exposure. The series concluded in 1973 with the introduction of the Spotmatic F (now incorporating open-aperture metering rather than the stop-down metering of the early models).
However by the mid-1970s the limitations of the M42 mount were being felt. By this time most other manufacturers had opted for a bayonet lens mount. It was a great step for Asahi Optical to take but the M42 screw mount, by now widely known as 'Pentax screw mount', had reached the end of its useful life. Pentax were now to adopt the lens mount that would see them through the next 30 years.
[edit] K Mount cameras
[edit] K Series
- K2 (1975 - 1980)
- KX (1975 - 1977)
- KM (1975 - 1977)
- K1000 (1976 - 1997)
Three new models were introduced at once in 1975: the K2, KM and KX. The KM was almost identical in features and operation to the Spotmatic F. The KX featured a better TTL light meter using SPD (silicon photodiodes), visible aperture and shutter speeds in the viewfinder, and a mirror lock-up mechanism. The K2, the flagship model, incorporated aperture-priority autoexposure with a fully manually selectable range of shutter speeds from 1s to 1/1000. The only other aperture priority camera Pentax had made up to this point, the ES series, only had manual shutter speeds from 1/60 upwards. A special version of the K2 was also produced (called the K2DMD) to use a motor drive and data back. A later addition to the K series was the K1000 (basically a KM stripped of its self-timer and depth of field preview), later to find fame as the perennial camera of choice for photography students.
What set these cameras apart from any earlier Pentax was the removal of the M42 lens mount. With the K series of cameras, Pentax followed its rivals and introduced its own bayonet mount, the K mount. Still the basis for Pentax lenses and cameras today, this offered greater convenience and enabled the production of faster lenses such as the 50 mm f/1.2.[3] Eager to keep M42 users in the Pentax system, an M42-K Mount adaptor was offered, enabling M42 users to continue to use their existing lenses (with loss of automation).
The K series cameras followed the design ethos of the time, big and heavy. But scarcely had the K series been introduced than Pentax worked on a new camera line, a new camera line reflecting a new ethos - one which continues to influence Pentax to this day.
[edit] M Series
The M series cameras were noted for their compact size, among the smallest and lightest 35 mm SLRs ever made. Except for the MX, all were based on the same basic camera body, and featured aperture-priority exposure automation. While superficially resembling the ME, the MX was designed as a manual-only SLR system targeted to the advanced amateur or professional photographer, and had its own set of accessories that were mostly incompatible with the other M series cameras. Conversely, the other M-series cameras were targeted squarely at casual users. None of the M-series, with the exception of the MX, featured a depth of field preview.
The ME featured aperture-priorty only automation with no manual override. The MX was entirely manual and resembled the earlier KX in features. The ME Super was an ME with a manual mode. The MG, MV, and MV1 were even simpler versions of the original ME.
The ME-F was an early attempt at an autofocus SLR using a special 35-70mm zoom with a motor built into the lens.
- ME-F (1981-1988)
- ME (1976 - 1980)
- ME Super (1980 - 1987)
- MG (1982 - 1985)
- MV (1979 - 1982)
- MV1 (1979 - 1982)
- MX (1976 - 1985)
[edit] A Series
The A series added fully-programmed exposure control (adjusting both aperture and shutter speed automatically) to the M series. To enable control of the lens aperture by the camera body, it used the new KA-mount, a backward-compatible modification that also allowed the array of standard K-mount lenses to be used in manual and aperture-priority exposure modes. The A series were the first cameras from Pentax to use LCD digital displays for exposure information in the viewfinder. The superA/superPROGRAM and the programA/programPLUS both used a translucent white window on the front of the pentaprism to provide backlight to the LCD display without having to use the battery for illumination.
- superA/superPROGRAM (1983 - 1987)
- programA/programPLUS (1984 - 1988)
- A3/A3000 (1985 - 1987)
[edit] LX
The LX model was a tough, professional-grade competitor to the Nikon F3, the Canon F1, Olympus OM's, and Contax RTS. Like the Nikon F3 and Canon F1 it was very rugged and had interchangeable screens and viewfinders. Yet it was smaller and lighter, better sealed against the weather, and with its S69 screen had a brighter viewfinder than almost any camera ever made. The LX used an advanced metering system that measured the light falling on the first shutter curtain during exposure (as opposed to most cameras which measure light at the viewing screen). During long exposures the LX actually measured light reflected from the film itself. Because of this metering system, the LX could perform very accurate long exposures.
Shutter speeds and apertures were visible in the viewfinder in an arrangement similar to the earlier KX. The camera remained in production for more than 20 years.
- LX (1980 - 2001)
[edit] P Series
- P5/P50 (1986-1989)
- P3/P30 (1985-1988)
- P3n/P30n (1988-1990)
- P30t (1990-1997)
[edit] SF Series
The SFX (called the SF1 in the US) was the world's first AF SLR with built-in TTL auto flash, which is retractable. Pentax has referred to the built-in flash as "RTF" (Retractable TTL Flash) ever since then.([1]
- SFX/SF1 (1987-1989)
- SFXn/SF1n (1989-1993)
- SF7/SF10 (1988-1993)
[edit] Z/Pz Series
[edit] MZ/ZX Series
[edit] *ist Series (Film)
*ist (2003-Present)
[edit] Digital
[edit] MZ-D Prototype
The Pentax MZ-D, also known by its internal code name of MR-52, was a prototype digital single-lens reflex camera. It was announced at Photokina in September 2000 and was demonstrated to the press at the Photo Marketing Association (PMA) show in January 2001. In October 2003, Pentax canceled the camera, stating "The cost of manufacturing the prototype SLR 6-megapixel digital camera meant it was not a viable product for our target market."
[edit] *ist Series (Digital)
In 2003 Pentax released their first Digital SLR, the Pentax *ist D which uses a 6 megapixel CCD. In 2004 Pentax released the Pentax *ist DS, its first real consumer model (retailing under $1000 USD). In 2005 Pentax released the Pentax *ist DL, a model with fewer features than the DS and a lower price. All Pentax's digital SLRs are compatible with K-mount lenses, and M42 (42 mm screw mount) lenses (with adaptor). Due to the smaller size of the CCD, lenses have an effective field of view of 1.5 × times the same lens in 35 mm format. So, where a 50 mm lens was considered a "normal" lens on 35 mm film, that same lens on a 1.5× "crop factor" camera has the field of view of a 75 mm lens on film. This only uses the center of the lens' projected image. To address this "crop factor," Pentax created a new series of lenses that were designed only to cover the smaller sensor. These are the DA and D-FA models of new lenses for their digital SLRs, which still feature the K-mount but have a smaller back-focus element designed specifically for use with the Digital SLR lineup.
- *ist D (2003-2006)
- *ist DS (2004-2006)
- *ist DS2 (2005-2006)
- *ist DL (2005-2006)
- *ist DL2 (2006)
[edit] K Series (Digital)
In May 2006, Pentax announced a new line of Digital SLR cameras, based on the *ist D series. The K100D and K110D combine the features of the *ist DL2 and DS2, while incorporating in-body shake reduction in the K100D model..[4] The Pentax K10D, a low-priced 10-megapixel weatherproofed model, was announced on 14 September 2006.
The K10D features a pentaprism viewfinder (instead of the slightly dimmer pentamirror on some previous models), full programmed, aperture and shutter priority modes, and a new mode called Sensitivity-priority in which the camera adjusts the ISO within user-defined limits to correct exposure. In addition, the K10D can write JPEGs and two versions of RAW files (PEF, and the new Adobe standard DNG).
[edit] Optio (Digital)
Pentax Optio W10 cameras are small portable digital cameras that are dustproof and waterproof to approximately 6 feet (1.8 m). see
[edit] Other formats
Pentax is one of the few camera manufacturers still producing medium format cameras. At the time of writing, there are two offerings, one in the 6×7 cm format (Pentax 67 II) and one in the 6×4.5 cm format (Pentax 645NII). Both use the 120 film format, which is a roll film. These cameras build on the Pentax SLR design experience. The shape of the Pentax 67 is broadly similar to a 35 mm SLR camera. By contrast, the Pentax 645 resembles other medium-format cameras by makers such as Mamiya and Bronica, which tend to be cube-shaped.
Another interesting product was the tiny Auto 110 reflex system, based on the 110 pocket-instamatic film format.
[edit] Corporate cooperation and competition
In 2005, Pentax Corporation partnered with Samsung Techwin to share work on camera technologies and recapture market ground from Nikon and Canon. Then Pentax and Samsung started releasing new DSLR siblings from this agreement. The Pentax *istDS2 and *istDL2 also appeared as the Samsung GX-1S and GX-1L, while the jointly developed (90% Pentax and 10% Samsung) Pentax K10D gave birth to the Samsung GX-10. Pentax lenses (made in Vietnam) are also rebranded and sold as the Schneider Kreuznach D-Xenon and D-Xenogon lenses for the Samsung DSLRs.
On December 21, 2006, Hoya Corporation and Pentax Corporation held a joint press conference announcing their merging into Hoya Pentax HD Corporation, to become fully effective on October 1st, 2007. The new company will focus its main business on the following areas: life care, eye care, optics, information technology, imaging systems.
Pentax's main competitors include Canon, Sony, Leica, Nikon, and Olympus.
[edit] See also
[edit] Links
- Pentax Corporation
- Pentax digital SLR cameras (requires Flash)
- Asahi Optical Historical Club
- Bojidar Dimitrov's comprehensive K-mount info
- Comprehensive Pentax Images and Info
[edit] Notes
- ^ Hoya and Pentax Reach Basic Understanding for Management Integration (2006/12/21)
- ^ The Japanese Historical Camera, p.58. (Japanese SLR cameras go back to Konishi's Sakura Reflex Prano of 1907. The Japanese Historical Camera, p.5.)
- ^ However, there were 55/1.2 M42 lenses from Tomioka/Yashica and Cosina ((Japanese) shown here).
- ^ Digital SLR Camera: K100D. Pentax.
[edit] References
- The Japanese Historical Camera. 日本の歴史的カメラ (Nihon no rekishiteki kamera). 2nd ed. Tokyo: JCII Camera Museum, 2004.