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Zeiss Ikon Contax Iia

Currency:USD Category:Cameras & Photo Start Price:120.00 USD Estimated At:250.00 - 500.00 USD
Zeiss Ikon Contax Iia
SOLD
160.00USD+ (36.00) buyer's premium + applicable fees & taxes.
This item SOLD at 2015 Apr 17 @ 15:45UTC-7 : PDT/MST
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Zeiss Ikon Contax Iia with Carl Zeiss Sonnar 50mm 1.5 lens. Includes Five Zeiss Ikon Filters in original cases.



With the Contax IIa, Zeiss Ikon introduced a brand new 35mm rangefinder camera, to replace the aged Contax II/III, a design that had at times given trouble for its silk shutter straps which had to be renewed in certain intervals. Moreover, it was now mass produced in the Soviet Union as the Kiev II/III. Hubert Nerwin had already started this new design at the end of the war before he had left for the U.S., but having only few trained technicians at Stuttgart right after the war, the introduction of the new camera was delayed. The Contax IIa/IIIa line of cameras were an engineering tour de force, with many new features such as flash synch, and a shutter that could be set to any speed with the curtains either tensioned or un-tensioned. Gone were the failure prone silk straps of the previous camera, in their place were nylon cords for opening the first curtain, and driving the flash synch, and heavy nylon strapping to drive the second curtain, and slow speed retard. Also, gone were the straps running through a hole in the first curtain, which was the cause of most strap failure. This line of cameras could use any of the common film canister systems of the day, with one canister, or two, or could be used as a conventional shoot to the end, rewind style camera. The back and bottom of the camera came off to give easy loading, while the take up spool came out too for easy connection to the leader. Many believe that the Contax IIa/IIIa are in terms of built quality, the finest camera line ever built (ZeissIkonRolleiRepair.com). However, as the two curtains travel independently, this design was more prone to shutter fading on the high speeds, something that was impossible on the prewar Contaxes.

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Date: 1950

FHWAC#: 25833