caméra vidéo pour cassette videotape 8 mm ; tube Newvicon 1/3 inch ; viseur noir et blanc électronique ; zoom et filtres réglables ; balance des couleurs ; convertisseur-chargeur ; commande : cassette 8 mm P6-30
Informations non disponibles
Eastman Kodak Company
Rochester, New York
Informations non disponibles
Kodak-Pathé, Société anonyme
Paris, 39 avenue Montaigne et 17 rue François Ier
Informations non disponibles
TV Zoom Lens 1 : 1,2, 7-42 mm
Ouvert :
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Fermé :
Longueur : 34 cm
Largeur : 16 cm
Hauteur : 16.5 cm
Diamètre :
Informations non disponibles
Longueur : 32 cm
Largeur : 39 cm
Hauteur : 20 cm
Marque : "Kodavision series 2000 Camcorder 2400 Auto Focus".
"Eastman Kodak has become the first company to demonstrate and commit itself to an 8 mm video camera recorder system, called Kodavision series 2000. Actually, it includes two camcorders (video cameras plus recorders) : the 2200 and its autofocusing sister model 2400. [...] They record on a 60 or 90 minutes 92x62x15 mm cassette - about the size of the standard audiotype which measures 100x64x9 mm. The camcorders have a 7-42 mm f.1.2 power-zoom lens that focuses to four ft. and offers macro at wide-angle. Their image tube is a newly developed 1/3 inch Newvicon - even smaller than those miniature 1/2 in. ones found in many of the new cameras. The 1/3 inch Newvicon should give about 50 percent more magnification than the 1/2 in. type with a lens of comparable focal length" (Popular Photography, mars 1984, p. 71).
Popular Mechanics, April 1984, p. 188.
Popular Photography, mars 1984, p. 71.