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FP-1 camera

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Printed on: 5/12/2026 10:16:17 PM


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Topic author: Luiz Paracampo

Posted on: 20130706183108

Unknown special 6x9 and 6x6 camera using Moskva body and Helios 2.5 100mm lenses seems to be an oscilloscope camera
Made by KMZ
good pictures to enlarge Photohistory Abramov's site.and ours
http://rafcamera.com/still-image-cameras/cameras/16mm-spy-submini/russian-document-copying-device

Replies

Reply author: Zoom

Replied on: 20130708040008

<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="MS Trebuchet, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by Luiz Paracampo</i>
<br />Unknown special 6x9 and 6x6 camera using Moskva body and Helios 2.5 100mm lenses seems to be an oscilloscope camera
Made by KMZ
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote">
Why unknown?
http://www.zenitcamera.com/archive/foton/index.html#foton-os

<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="MS Trebuchet, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote">We suppose that this is device for a document copying similar to one used in KGB.<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote">
KGB... KGB... Everywhere was KGB, everything was KGB... You would think that in our country we didn't have anything other than the KGB. :(

Reply author: okynek

Replied on: 20130709134330

Thank you Luiz for the link.
I have few US-maid oscilloscope cameras (easy to find), but I did not see oscilloscope camera made in USSR. It actually strange why they did not make them. They made millions of oscilloscopes, some models was pretty advance.

Reply author: Svetopisez

Replied on: 20130710052645

Hi okynek, you are wrong a bit... In the USSR there was a few oscilloscope adapters (hoods with bindings to oscilloscope and a camera) for the RF and SLR cameras and as an example of true (specially constructed) oscilloscope camera you can find here Snezhinka - http://www.ussrphoto.com/Wiki/default.asp?WikiCatID=81&ParentID=1&ContentID=142&Item=Snezhinka

Reply author: Luiz Paracampo

Replied on: 20130710175351

Zoom
You simply reinforced the unknown adjective.
The camera you indicated differes from the pointed one not only bu the name but by its charateristicsa
the FN-1 is a 120 roll film camera and the foton OS uses instant film ans is appontesd inthe site.
Both cameras uses the same structure and lens and are similar but are not the same camera.

http://www.ussrphoto.com/UserContent/1072013_fp1.png


http://www.ussrphoto.com/UserContent/1072013_fp1.png

Reply author: Zoom

Replied on: 20130711024828

<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="MS Trebuchet, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by Luiz Paracampo</i>
<br />Both cameras uses the same structure and lens and are similar but are not the same camera.
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote">
Your right to think so. In fact this variants are all the same camera.

Reply author: Svetopisez

Replied on: 20130711031109

Completely agree with Zoom! This is the same camera with differenet film adapters - instant film in Foton-OS and 120 (back of Moscow-5 camera) in FP-1

Reply author: Vlad

Replied on: 20130712233340

Stupid question, why do you take a picture of an oscilloscope? - sorry I never used one..

Reply author: Svetopisez

Replied on: 20130713094409

Sometimes the scientists and engineers need to have the signal graphs from the oscilloscope as a document for their articles, thesis and so forth. It is concerning of course about an old CRT oscilloscopes which has no computer connection.

Reply author: okynek

Replied on: 20130715153108

<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="MS Trebuchet, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote">
In the USSR there was a few oscilloscope adapters (hoods with bindings to oscilloscope and a camera) for the RF and SLR cameras and as an example of true (specially constructed) oscilloscope camera you can find here Snezhinka <hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote">
Dmitry, where I was working we had 100s if not 1000s of oscilloscopes, but no cameras or hoods with cameras to make occilo-pictures. In fact I never see one alive, I did not know that they existed when I was working with scopes in USSR. Do not see them for sale on eBay as well. I do not say that they not existed, but they definitely was produced in very small quantities and they are rare.
In coronary in US oscilloscope cameras are common and easy to find, probably because they was pushed by salespeople, and because they out-lived scopes they was designed for.
The scope camera would be very useful in many occasions, in college we had to cut cooking paper, put it on the scope, and trace the signal to prove our findings in the lab. And when you need to compare signals you would use such cameras, if you would have one. And for teaching purpose.
Snezinka camera you was pointing was made in 1990, to little to late for me. And I can not figure out how can you attach it to the oscilloscope, most of them had rectangular screens at that time.

Reply author: Vlad

Replied on: 20130715171029

I see, thanks for explanation!