Voigtländer Prominent Explained

Camera Name:Prominent
Type:35mm rangefinder camera
Maker:Voigtländer
Lens Mount:proprietary bayonet
Focus:manual
Exposure:manual
Dimensions: (with lens)[1]
Weight: (without lens)
Shutter:Synchro-Compur leaf, behind-lens
Shutter Speeds:1– + B, X/M

Prominent refers to two distinct lines of rangefinder cameras made by Voigtländer.

The first Prominent, stylized in all-caps as PROMINENT and also known as the Prominent 6×9 to distinguish it from the later camera line, was a folding, fixed-lens rangefinder camera that used 120 film and was first marketed in 1932. Relatively few were sold and the post-war Prominent, using 135 film, is better known.

The second Prominent (stylized with small caps as ) was a line of 35mm interchangeable lens cameras built after World War II in the 1950s, equipped with leaf shutters. The second line of Prominent cameras were marketed as professional system cameras against the Leica threadmount and M bayonet mount and Zeiss Ikon Contax rangefinder camera lines. Voigtländer also sold the Vitessa and Vito lines of compact 35mm rangefinders contemporaneously, generally equipped with fixed, collapsible normal lenses, as less-expensive alternatives to the Prominent.

Cameras

Prominent 6×9

The Prominent 6×9 was introduced in 1932 as the top-of-the-line folding rollfilm camera from Voigtländer, which also sold similar models with fewer features as the Bessa, Virtus, Perkeo, and Inos.[2] The base-board opens when a button is depressed, and the spring-loaded lens carrier advances to the correct position, making the camera ready for exposure.[3] It is equipped with a fixed Heliar anastigmat 105 mm lens, developed contemporaneously with and similar to the Carl Zeiss Tessar, and one of two supplemental Focar close-up lenses can be added for portraits or macro photography.[3] The Compur leaf shutter features speeds ranging from 1– sec, plus "B"ulb and "T"imer settings along with a self-timer delayed release.[3] An extinction meter is used to set the appropriate aperture and shutter speed.[3]

Records indicate that approximately 10,000 Prominent 6×9 cameras were made from 1932 to 1935, including 5 prototypes with a faster "Turbo" shutter with a top speed of  sec.[4] The Prominent 6×9 was renamed to the Bessa Rangefinder starting in 1935, capitalizing on the more recognized branding.

"Miniature" Prominent 35mm

The "miniature" Prominent which takes 135 film was introduced in 1952 and produced until 1958, when it was succeeded by the , which was produced until 1960.[5] The original Prominent (135) included numerous detail improvements over its production run, mainly to minor items including the inclusion of strap lugs and a film reminder on the baseplate with later models; the Prominent II has a distinctive, larger Albada-type viewfinder and square rangefinder window, while the original Prominent has a smaller, rectangular viewfinder and round rangefinder window, although the camera bodies are basically the same. The earliest Prominent (135) has a Synchro-Compur shutter with a top speed of  sec, which was updated to  sec within a year.[6]

Operation

Exposure (aperture and shutter speed) are set on the lens, while focus is set using a knob on the top deck, operated by the photographer's left hand.[7]

Lenses

The primary normal lenses were branded Ultron and Nokton; both lens types were designed by Albrecht Tronnier.[8] [9] [10] Stephen Gandy notes the "Nokton was one of the very best fast lenses of the 50's, even a good performer by today's standards."[11]

The initial set of accessory lenses, the Ultragon wide-angle and the Telomar telephoto, were each attached to a reflex housing to assist focus; the Telomar also was designed by Tronnier.[12]

FL (mm) !! rowspan=2
Aperture !Name Construction Notes
Ele Grp
24 Ultragon7 5Retrofocus design, attached to reflex housing
35 Skoparon5 4Retrofocus design,[13] negative front meniscus with Skopar[14]
50 Nokton7 5Modified double Gauss lens
Ultron6 5Modified double Gauss lens
Color-Skopar4 3Tessar-type
100 Dynaron6 ?Rangefinder-coupled
Telomar5 3Attached to reflex housing
150 Super Dynaron? ?Rangefinder-coupled

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Voigtländer: known the world over (brochure) . Voigtländer . Pacific Rim Camera, Reference Library . 4 May 2023.
  2. Web site: Voigtlander Prominent 6X9 . Photographica Pages . Pacific Rim Camera . 1 June 2023.
  3. Web site: Instructions for Use, Prominent (Nr. 3167/233) . Voigtländer . Pacific Rim Camera, Reference Library . 1953 . 3 May 2023.
  4. Web site: Prominent 6x9 (1932-1935) . Voigtländer Camera Collection . 1 June 2023.
  5. Web site: Voigtlander Prominent . it . Bertacchi, Massimo . 21 June 2003 . Corso Polaris . 4 May 2023.
  6. Web site: Prominent Series . Voigtländer Camera Collection . 1 June 2023.
  7. Web site: Prominent: A Milestone in Progress! . March 1952 . Voigtländer . Pacific Rim Camera, Reference Library.
  8. US . Patent . 2649023 . Albrecht Wilhelm Tronnier . January 27, 1950 . November 17, 1950 . August 18, 1953 . Modified Gauss-type four-component photographic objective.
  9. DE . Patent . 969778C . Sphärisch, chromatisch, astigmatisch und komatisch korrigiertes Objektiv . Albrecht W. Tronnier . Voigtländer & Sohn AG . January 13, 1950 . February 4, 1950 . August 28, 1958.
  10. US . Patent . 2645155A . Photographic objective of high light-transmitting capacity of the gauss type . Albrecht W. Tronnier . Voigtländer & Sohn AG . January 16, 1950 . September 12, 1950 . July 14, 1953.
  11. Web site: Voigtlander Prominent Luxury Leaf Shutter Rangefinder . Gandy, Stephen . November 26, 2003 . CameraQuest . 1 June 2023.
  12. US . Patent . 2662446A . Photographic teleobjective having a composite positive front part axially spaced from a composite negative rear part . Albrecht W. Tronnier . Voigtländer & Sohn AG . December 13, 1951 . December 13, 1951 . December 15, 1953.
  13. The Reversed Telephoto Objective: A Tutorial Paper . Kingslake, Rudolf . Rudolf Kingslake . March 1966 . Journal of the SMPTE . 75 . 203–207.
  14. US . Patent . 2746351A . Photographic objective of the modified triplet type and a meniscus shaped negative member axially separated therefrom . March 5, 1952 . March 3, 1953 . May 22, 1956 . Albrecht Wilhelm Tronnier . Voigtländer & Sohn AG.