Tōkyō Kōgaku 39mm screw lenses

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M39
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(de) Leica III | Leica IIIf | Leica 250 Reporter
(ussr) FED | Zorki | MIR | Drug | Leningrad
(ja) Canon II/III/IV | Canon VT | Leotax | Bessa | Yasuhara T981
(uk) Periflex | Reid
(at) Wica
M39
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(de) Astro Berlin | Enna | Hensoldt | Isco | Meyer | Rodenstock | Schacht | Schneider | Steinheil | Voigtländer | Zeiss
(ja) Acall | Arco | Canon | Chiyoda | Fuji / Fujinon | Hexanon | Kobalux | Komura | Konishiroku / Konica | Leotax | Minolta | MS Optical R&D | Nippon Kōgaku / Nikkor | Olympus | Pentax | Ricoh | Rokkor | Serenar | Simlar | Sun | Tanaka/Tanar | Telesar | Tōkyō Kōgaku / Topcor | Voigtländer | Zeika | Zuiho | Zuiko | Zunow
(fr) Angénieux | Berthiot
(uk) Corfield | Dallmeyer | National Opt. Co. | Pam | Ross | Taylor, Taylor & Hobson
(it) Elionar | Koritska | Kristall | Trixar | Wega
(nl) Old Delft
(us) Bausch & Lomb | Kodak

Tōkyō Kōgaku (maker of the Topcon cameras) made lenses in 39mm Leica mount for some Japanese Leica copies, mainly the Leotax. All were all chrome unless noted. The chronological order is State - C Simlar - Simlar - Topcor - Topcor S.

  • 35/2.8 Topcor, sold with a very big external finder
  • 50/3.5 State (collapsible)
  • 50/3.5 C Simlar (collapsible)
  • 50/3.5 Simlar (collapsible), also as "Simlar 1:3,5 f=5cm Tokyo Opt. Co."
  • 50/3.5 Topcor (collapsible), diaphragm ring around the front lens, then around the barrel
  • 50/3.5 Topcor K (rigid), aluminium barrel and knurled rings
  • 50/2.8 Topcor,(rigid) black and chrome finish. (Heliar) Optical design is a copy of the 1952 Voigtländer (R&D) "Color Heliar" (Extremely rare lens due to very low production numbers)
  • 50/2 Topcor
  • 50/2 Topcor S, chrome, then black and chrome, then black with aluminium barrel
  • 50/1.8 Topcor S, black finish
  • 50/1.5 Simlar
  • 50/1.5 Topcor
  • 9cm f/4 C Simlar[1]
  • 90/3.5 Topcor, aluminium barrel and knurled rings, sold with an external finder
  • 135/3.5 Topcor, aluminium barrel, sold with an external finder with 50/90/135 frames

Notes

  1. See this page of Nekosan's website.

Links

In Japanese:

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