quote:
Originally posted by Vlad
Hello Gentlemen,
I definitely do not think this was made to sell as a fake, very possible it was a custom order of some high ranking journalist, or any other person of means or even an organization needing a specialized camera like that.
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Vlad
Vlad,
I do not think this was actually ordered by an end user (reporter, etc). These are only guesses, but I'd say this was meant to be a curiosity/collector piece, made by an enthusiast with access to good machine tools.
as a side note - there were hundreds and thousands of factories in the USSR, most of them has a special 'instrumental'nyi' shop (a tooling shop) with top-class machinists. These shops made custom parts to repair production equipment, make dies for presses, etc. It is incredible what they could do.
Those old enough to remember - the weakest part of a Lada motor was its camshaft, and they were very hard to find. So a few guys from the tooling shop at my factory manufactured these camshafts.
This is a very complex part, a hollow shaft with many special profile polished surfaces, tempered in a certain way (soft inside and hard on the surface), with a gear on one side - all in one piece. A Zorki-250 body would be a child's play for these guys.
It was also very common in the USSR to use company resources (machines, materials, time) for your own projects.
My point is - it was NOT difficult to produce this Zorki-250. I am only surprised they did not make many more of them. Perhaps at the time they were made the price was not high enough to justify the hassle, and the few (or one?) Zorki-250 were made more for fun and love than for business.
Yuri