• Maobylens
    1595 posts
    2 years ago

    A very, very long time ago...

    The arrival of the first polaroid cameras 95, 95A, 95b

    model 95 (1948)
    model 95A (1954)
    model 95b (1957)

    live.staticflickr.com/2852/13807397164_9cd45d8401_b.jpg


    Family photo Model 95, 95A, 95b
    by Marc Aubry, sur Flickr

    Anecdote: I bought the Polaroid 95A in 1977 for $24.30 CDN, I was 22 years old!
The Polaroid 95A seemed so old to me at the time, I had managed to get some film (rollfilm 42) to take black and white pictures. I was so excited to be able to make this old camera work.

    Today I have owned the Polaroid 95A for more than 46 years, now 69 years old.
With time, we don't perceive things in the same way anymore. Time passes so quickly!

  • Maobylens
    1595 posts
    2 years ago

    Polaroid has produced several versions of these behemoths, both heavy and cumbersome!

    Polaroid Model 700, 800, 850, 900

    live.staticflickr.com/7067/13807396614_9e11765f8b_c.jpg


    Family photo Model 700, 800, 850, 900
    by Marc Aubry, sur Flickr

    model 700 (1955-57)
    model THE 800 (1957-62)
    model 850 ELECTRIC-EYE (1961-63)
    model 900 ELECTRIC-EYE (1960-63)

  • Maobylens
    1595 posts
    2 years ago
  • Maobylens
    1595 posts
    2 years ago
  • StanDisbrowpanorama_fish_eye
    479 posts
    2 years ago

    Hi,

    My experience with Polaroid has all been with the instrument models. They hang onto a screen and take a shot of what's on it for documentation. I've been using a cell phone camera since the CommuniCam for the Ericsson T68 since about 2000.

    Such as:

    IMG_20170712_100917.jpg

    This one with a BlackBerry Z10 I keep handy. What else can one do with a BlackBerry these days?? ;)

    Sorry that I no longer have any of the old Polaroid cameras I used to use for this sort of work.

    Found a pic online of such a Polaroid on an O-scope.

    jEXP0Cb_d.webp

    Once you had the instrument displaying what you wanted to show, just hang the camera on and snap! ;)

    Stan

    jEXP0Cb_d.webp

    WEBP, 19.9 KB, uploaded by StanDisbrow 2 years ago.

    IMG_20170712_100917.jpg

    JPG, 1.3 MB, uploaded by StanDisbrow 2 years ago.

  • Maobylens
    1595 posts
    2 years ago
  • DeletedRemoved user
    2 years ago

    The only Polaroid that I ever owned:

    Polaroid x530

    Should have kept it ... ho hum

  • Maobylens
    1595 posts
    2 years ago
  • simplejoyhelp_outline
    1662 posts
    2 years ago

    Excellent presentation with this thread! I don't have any real experience with Polaroid cameras but it's very interesting to read and see anyway.

    Do you have any experience with the MP4/5 or CU versions? I love some of the lenses used on those.

    Yup - that has been the things I've seen before... Polaroid cameras for CRT production, oscilloscopes or even capturing traces of certain movements on nuclear test sites... if I remember correctly!

  • JimKassonpanorama_fish_eye
    1738 posts
    2 years ago

    My favorite 'scope was a Tek 547, and it had a Polaroid camera permanently attached. It swung away when you weren't using it. I still remember the smell of the coating material, and my old lab notebooks still smell of it.

  • simplejoyhelp_outline
    1662 posts
    2 years ago

    Very interesting - is that as in "Tektronix"? I just found out about that company today... seems like they made some fascinating stuff, somewhat similar to what Steinheil did in Germany!

  • JimKassonpanorama_fish_eye
    1738 posts
    2 years ago

    Indeed. One of the bad things about my time at HP was that I couldn't use Tek scopes there.

  • JimKassonpanorama_fish_eye
    1738 posts
    2 years ago
  • DeletedRemoved user
    2 years ago

    Back in the day when I was a real engineer my Section bought a Polaroid IR sensor to measure the individual temperatures of hot-end rotor blades in a gas turbine while it was running.

  • StanDisbrowpanorama_fish_eye
    479 posts
    2 years ago

    Hi,

    I was always able to pick and choose between HP and Tektronix. I'd hate having to be all-in any one camp. That instrument I took the cell phone screen shot of is an HP Modulation Domain Analyzer showing the RF output frequency swing of a transmitter when the power amplifier kicks only. One of those pesky-to-get measurements. And HP made a box for that kind of work. Tek did not. The measurement can be made with other equipment, but I'd hate to have to! ;)

    Easy as it is to capture with a phone cam, I miss the Polaroid.

    Stan

  • JimKassonpanorama_fish_eye
    1738 posts
    2 years ago

    When I was at IBM, it took some justification to get a Mac for some imaging work, but I did it. At HP, Tek was the enemy.

  • Maobylens
    1595 posts
    2 years ago

    Polaroid rollfilm are becoming increasingly rare!
    Reproduction becomes difficult, and another species, which is threatened with extinction!

    Baby Polaroid

    live.staticflickr.com/711/20665677858_3fae41402f_b.jpg


    Baby
    by Marc Aubry, sur Flickr

  • Maobylens
    1595 posts
    2 years ago