Chinon Industries

Chinon Industries
Chinon Industries Inc.
チノン株式会社
Former type Kabushiki gaisha
Industry electronics
Founded 1948
Defunct 2004
Headquarters Nagano, Japan
Key people Joel Proegler, last president of Chinon
Products Cameras, computer peripherals
Website http://www.chinon.co.jp/

Chinon Industries Inc. (チノン株式会社 Chinon Kabushiki-gaisha?) was a Japanese camera manufacturer. Kodak took a majority stake in the company in 1997, and made it a fully owned subsidiary of Kodak Japan, Kodak Digital Product Center, Japan Ltd. (株式会社コダック デジタル プロダクト センター Kabushiki-gaisha Kodakku Dejitaru Purodakuto Sentā?), in 2004 .[1] As a subsidiary, it continues to develop digital camera models.

Chinon CE-3 memotron labeled as Revueflex AC 1
Chinon CP-9 AF with Autofocusobjectiv 35-135mm

They manufactured many cameras, such as the CG-5, which was one of the first cameras ever to use an Auto Focus lens, which had to be bought separately. The lenses are now rare and difficult to come by. They were cumbersome and had two infra-red "eyes" on the top. They would connect by a bayonet fitting similar to the Pentax K fitting, except they also had electrical contacts which would power the motor at the press of the shutter release button.

Another popular camera was the CM-1, a basic, fully manual 35 mm SLR camera favored by student amateur photographers because it was cheaper than the rival Pentax K-1000, but could use the same lenses and accessories. The CM-1 featured a battery-powered through-the-lens light metering system that utilized a red-above, green-middle, and red-below to indicate whether the film speed/shutter speed/aperture setting was over/ok/under exposing the picture. It also used a split-image prism for determining when an image was properly focused. The CM-1 was sold through discount retailers such as K-Mart during the 1980s and proved to be very durable and reliable.

Most of Chinon's SLR cameras used the Pentax K mount, which was promoted by Pentax as a universal mount and therefore Pentax allowed and even encouraged other manufacturers to utilize their mount. This helped to expand the range of lens offerings for both Chinon and Pentax cameras.

Chinon also was a manufacturer of CD-ROM drives, scanners, electronic pocket calculators, and floppy disk drives. They even dabbled in VR with Cybershades for the PC, launched in the US market in 1995 for $199.

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