GB1597073A - Photographic cartridge assembly and camera therefor - Google Patents

Photographic cartridge assembly and camera therefor Download PDF

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Publication number
GB1597073A
GB1597073A GB9040/78A GB904078A GB1597073A GB 1597073 A GB1597073 A GB 1597073A GB 9040/78 A GB9040/78 A GB 9040/78A GB 904078 A GB904078 A GB 904078A GB 1597073 A GB1597073 A GB 1597073A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
camera
film
hub
film unit
assembly
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
GB9040/78A
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Eastman Kodak Co
Original Assignee
Eastman Kodak Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US05/774,716 external-priority patent/US4264169A/en
Application filed by Eastman Kodak Co filed Critical Eastman Kodak Co
Publication of GB1597073A publication Critical patent/GB1597073A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03BAPPARATUS OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR TAKING PHOTOGRAPHS OR FOR PROJECTING OR VIEWING THEM; APPARATUS OR ARRANGEMENTS EMPLOYING ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ACCESSORIES THEREFOR
    • G03B17/00Details of cameras or camera bodies; Accessories therefor
    • G03B17/26Holders for containing light sensitive material and adapted to be inserted within the camera
    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03BAPPARATUS OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR TAKING PHOTOGRAPHS OR FOR PROJECTING OR VIEWING THEM; APPARATUS OR ARRANGEMENTS EMPLOYING ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ACCESSORIES THEREFOR
    • G03B19/00Cameras
    • G03B19/02Still-picture cameras
    • G03B19/023Multi-image cameras

Description

PATENT SPECIFICATION
( 11) 1 597073 ( 21) Application No 9040/78 ( 22) Filed 7 March 1978 ( 19) ( 31) Convention Application Nos 774716 ( 32) Filed 7 March 1977 in 774 715 ( 33) United States of America (US) ( 44) Complete Specification published 3 Sept 1981 ( 51) INT CL, G 03 B 17126 ( 52) Index at acceptance G 2 X 2 G 2 A Cl DF ( 72) Inventor DONALD MALCOLM HARVEY ( 54) PHOTOGRAPHIC CARTRIDGE ASSEMBLY, AND CAMERA THEREFOR ( 71) We, EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY, a Company organized under the Laws of the State of New Jersey, United States of America, of 343 State Street, Rochester, New York 14650 United States of America do hereby declare the invention, for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and
by the following statement:-
This invention relates to photographic still cameras and to cartridge assemblies therefor.
It has been known previously to provide a photographic system wherein the photosensitive material is in the form of a disc arranged to be rotated in a camera to position image areas thereof on an optical axis of the camera for exposure All such prior known systems have suffered from one or more serious disadvantages which has prevented viable commercial realisation of the system.
Generally, for example, if a disc of film is provided, to avoid dark-room loading of a camera, it should be provided in a cartridge having an exposure window If no steps are taken to prevent rotation of the disc within the cartridge prior to insertion of the latter into a camera and/or subsequent to removal of the cartridge from the camera, fogging of the photosensitive film disc will occur.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a cartridge assembly including a rotatable film unit, and a camera arranged to receive such assembly wherein such disadvantage has been minimised or overcome.
According to the present invention, there is provided a photographic cartridge assembly including a casing having an exposure window, a film unit comprising a disc rotatable within the casing and having a plurality of image areas presentable at the exposure window, a hub member secured to the disc for rotation therewith, and releasable inhibitive means for retaining rotation of the film unit relative to the casing when the film unit is in an initial orientation therein.
The invention also provides a photographic camera having a pocket for receiving a cartridge assembly as aforesaid and a key engageable with the inhibitive means of the cartridge assembly to release the same and to permit movement of the film unit relative to the cartridge casing.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 is an exploded perspective view of the photographic cartridge assembly described herein, Figure 2 is a plan view of one face of the cartridge assembly shown in Figure 1 with a portion of one outer casing member wall removed; Figure 3 is a plan view of the opposite face of the cartridge assembly of Figure 1; Figure 4 is a fragmentary enlarged crosssectional view taken along line 4-4 of Figure 2; Figure 5 is an enlarged view of a portion of Figure 4; Figure 6 is a cross-sectional view taken along line 6-6 of Figure 4; Figure 7 is a cross-sectional view taken along line 7-7 of Figure 4; Figure 8 is a cross-sectional view corresponding to the view of Figure 4, including a portion of a cooperating camera mechanism, and showing the relationship of structural parts at an initial stage of operation of the cartridge assembly; Figure 9 is a cross-sectional view taken along line 9-9 of Figure 4, but including a portion of a cooperating camera mechanism:
Figure 10 is a cross-sectional view taken along line 10-10 of Figure 8; Figure 11 is a cross-sectional view corresponding to the view of Figure 8 and showing the relationship of structural parts at a later stage of operation of the cartridge Cl\ c tx 1,597,073 assembly; Figure 12 is a cross-sectional view taken along line 12-12 of Figure 11; Figure 13 is a plan view, similar to that of Figure 3, partially broken away for the sake of illustration, but including a lock arrangement different to that shown in the earlier Figures; Figure 14 is a view similar to that of Figure 13 but showing the different lock arrangement in a later condition; Figure 15 is a cross-sectional view of a portion of a modified wall of a cartridge casing; Figure 16 is a cross-sectional view, similar to that of Figure 15, of a portion of a further modified wall of a cartridge casing; Figure 17 is a cross-sectional view, similar to that of Figures 15 and 16, of a portion of yet another modification of a wall of a cartridge casing; Figure 18 is a perspective view of a camera according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, suitable for loading with a cartridge assembly of any of the forms shown in the preceding figures; Fig 19 is a perspective view of the camera shown in Fig 18 illustrating that camera inverted and pointed in the opposite direction and with its cover door open to receive a cartridge assembly; Fig 20 is a plan view of mechanism incorporated in the camera shown in Fig 19, depicting the respective positions of the illustrated mechanism components when a film cartridge assembly has been loaded into the camera but before a film disc hub has been moved from its initial position; Fig 21 corresponds to Fig 20 but depicts the illustrated mechanism in the process of engaging the film disc hub to effect the initial rotational movement thereof; Fig 22 corresponds to Figs 20 and 21 and illustrates the respective positions of the mechanism components after completion of the first indexing operation which removes the cover slide from the exposure window and locates the first exposure area in position for exposure; Fig 23 is a fragmentary enlarged cross sectional view taken along line 23-23 of Fig 20; Fig 24 is a fragmentary perpsective view of a film support frame member incorporated in the camera; Fig 25 is a somewhat schematic cross sectional view of a gate structure and optical elements associated therewith, included in the camera illustrated in Figs 18 to 24; Fig 26 is an enlarged view of a portion of Fig 22 illustrating the advancing pawl tooth and the indexing pawl tooth; Fig 27 is an enlarged partially cross sectional view taken along line 27-27 of Fig.
20, Fig 28 is a plan view corresponding to Figs 20-22 but depicting the components of the camera located below the mechanism plate illustrated in those figures; Fig 29 is an enlarged fragmentary per 70 spective view of a portion of the shutter release mechanism illustrated in Fig 28; Fig 30 is an enlarged exploded view of the cover latching mechanism of the camera illustrated in Figs18-29; 75 Fig 31 is a somewhat schematic plan view of a second embodiment of a camera having a simple manual film advancing mechanism utilising a slightly modified film disc hub; 80 Fig 32 is an enlarged fragmentary view of the advancing and positioning teeth employed in the mechanism shown in Fig 31, and illustrates the respective positions of those teeth when the film disc is positioned 85 for exposure; Fig 33 corresponds to Fig 32 and shows the respective positions of the advancing and positioning teeth after the film disc hub has completed its rotation to return the cover 90 slide to the cartridge assemply's exposure window; Fig 34 is a somewhat schematic plan view of a third embodiment of a camera having an automatic film advancing mech 95 anism, showing the depicted components of that mechanism in their respective positions during the camera loading operation; Fig 35 illustrates the door latch device incorporated in the mechanism depicted in 100 Fig 34, showing that device in its latching condition; Fig 36 corresponds to Fig 34 and shows the door latch device in its released condition; 105 Fig 37 corresponds to Fig 34 and shows the respective positions assumed by the various illustrated components as the film disc is advanced and exposed; Fig 38 illustrates a modification of the 110 film unit advancing and indexing mechanism shown in Figs 34 and 37; Fig 39 depicts another modification of the mechanism shown in Figs 34 and 37, with the illustrated components shown in the 115 positions that they assume after completion of a film indexing operation; Fig 40 corresponds to Fig 39 but shows the depicted components in their respective positions during a film advancing operation; 120 Figure 41 is a perspective view of a film unit as described herein; Figure 42 is a perspective view of a plurality of film units arranged for handling subsequent to exposure; and 125 Figure 43 is a cross-sectional view of a portion of the equipment illustrated in Fig.
42.
Various terms such as "cartridge", "cassette" and "nagazine"have been used to refer 130 1,597,073 to film containers which, loaded with film, are put into cameras Such a container, loaded with film, is herein referred to as a "cartridge assembly" Because cartridges, cartridge assemblies and photographic cameras for use therewith are well-known, the present description is directed in particular to elements forming part of, or cooperating more directly with, cartridge assembly elements to which the present invention is specifically directed Apparatus that is not specifically shown or described herein is understood to be selectable from apparatus shown in the art.
Figure 1 shows, in exploded perspective, a cartridge assembly 11 which includes a film unit 17 and a casing The film unit 17 is comprised of a film disc 10 and a hub 12, (see Figure 41) together with a cover slide 14 and an opaque masking member 16 The casing includes a casing member 18 including a hub support 19 The cartridge assembly (see also Figures 2 and 3) is suited for cooperation with a camera of the form illustrated for example, in Figures 18 to 30.
The film disc 10, as shown herein, is formed in the shape of a disc with a generally circular outer perimeter 20 Although herein referred to as a "disc", other noncircular shapes such as polygonal, for example, hexagonal or octagonal, may, however, be adopted for use in embodiments of the present invention The film disc 10 includes a moderately flexible but self-supporting base sheet which may be formed of, for example, cellulose acetate or poly(ethylene terephthalate), the latter being sold under the trademark "Mylar" The base sheet carries photosensitive materials on one face thereof, thus providing a photographic imaging surface 13 on which one or more latent photographic images may be recorded and subsequently photographically developed.
The film disc 10 has a central opening 22.
The hub 12 is mounted in the central opening 22 of the film disc 10, with the hub and disc having a particular orientational relationship, as will be described later The film disc 10 and hub 12 are designed to remain attached for handling as a unit not only during exposure in a camera but also during processing, printing, viewing and other post-exposure operations The film unit has first and second faces which face in opposite directions along the axis A of rotation of the film unit The hub 12, being mounted in the film disc opening 22, constitutes (by means of its axially-oppositely facing faces) a portion of each of the film unit faces (see Fig 41) Both faces of the hub are available to carry or present structure of the type hereinafter described for handling the film unit.
The hub 12, which may be formed by suitable plastic molding techniques, includes a stepped ring structure 15 (see Fig 4), a portion of which projects through the film disc's central opening 22 During manufacturing operations, the film disc 10 and the 70 hub 12 are preliminarily aligned in predetermined relationship by means of a key 24 on the film disc 10 which projects into the central opening 22 and is closely received within a correspondingly shaped keyway 26 (see 75 Fig 5) formed in the hub The film disc 10 may be secured to the hub 12 by, for example, adhesive which causes a bonding of the disc to the hub Alternatively, if the hub 12 is formed of a deformable material such 80 as polystyrene, the film disc 10 may be secured by applying heat and/or pressure to the hub 12 Figure 5 shows a finger 28 which is formed adjacent the hub keyway 26 and which may be deformed (from its initial 85 position shown in phantom in Fig 5) onto the surface of the film disc 10 to secure the key 24 within the keyway 26 and clamp the disc to the hub Further fingers or other means of attaching the hub to the film disc 90 may be provided around the hub and opening as necessary, to ensure that both attachment and required orientational relationship are maintained throughout the useful life of the film unit 95 According to a preferred embodiment, the keyway 26 is a radial indentation of an annular recess extending around the hub and opening only away from the axis of rotation of the unit The disc 10 is received in 100 the recess and clamped by or bonded to the recess sidewalls One method for producing such a preferred structure involves beginning with a hub of a deformable material such as polystyrene, substantially as shown in 105 Fig 5 but without the fingers 28 The film disc 10 is placed in its desired position and a ring of polystyrene placed in a position corresponding to the final position of finger 28 The ring is then welded to the hub by 110 heat, ultrasonics or other similar method to clamp the disc permanently in a tight annular recess The hub and ring can be constructed to form a tight interference fit prior to welding to assist in the welding operation 115 Alternatively, the ring may form an integral axial wall which is deformable to form a radial wall of the annular recess and simultaneously to clamp the disc therein With this structure, during subsequent processing, 120 liquid is less likely to become trapped in the recess and later cause streaking if subjected to centrifugal force in processing.
The casing member 18, which is opaque and may be formed of paperboard, plastic 125 sheeting or other material, forms a first wall and a double-layer second wall 32 which is formed by flaps F 1, F 2, F,, and F, extending from the first wall 30 As more fully explained in connection with Figures 15 to 130 1,597,073 17, at least a portion of the casing's first wall 30 is thinned Also this portion is more flexible than, at least, the second wall 32, inasmuch as the first wall 30 is of only a single thickness During cartridge assembly manufacturing operations, the flaps F,-F, are folded into place, envelope fashion, and secured, as by adhesive, to house the film unit assembly Semicircular openings 31 a, 31 b, 31 c and 31 d in the flaps F 1, F 2, F, and F, combine, upon folding the flaps, to form a central circular aperture 34 (see Fig 2) which is of such a diameter as to accommodate a portion of the hub 12 and thereby render one face of the hub 12 accessible to a film-advancing mechanism of a camera.
A rectangular exposure window 33 is formed in flap F 3 and in flaps F 2 and F,, by cooperating cutout portions 35 and 351 which register with the window in flap 'F 3 when flaps F 2 and F 4 are folded into position beneath flap F 3.
As seen in Figures 2 and 3, the casing member 18 may be asymmetrically shaped, relative to an axis of rotation of the hub, as by having unevenly dog-eared corners (compare 56 and 561) in order to cooperate with a correspondingly shaped pocket in a camera to ensure that the cartridge will 'be insertable in the camera in one predetermined orientation only.
The first wall 30 of the casing member has a generally centrally located circular opening 36 within which the circular hub support 19 is secured, such as by adhesive.
Alternatively, the support 19 could be formed integrally with the casing member 18 as by known plastic molding techniques.
The film unit 17, by means of its hub 12, is mounted on the hub support 19 by a snaplatching arrangement which, as described in greater detail below, holds the film unit 17 and the hub support 19 in assembled relationship while permitting rotation of the film unit 17 with respect to the support 19.
The passage of light rays through the exposure window 33 and onto the photosensitive film disc 10 is precluded (when the cartridge assembly is not protectively encased by a camera) by means of the cover slide 14 and the masking member 16 The cover slide 14 may be formed of thin, but relatively stiff, opaque sheet material and includes a generally fan-shaped leaf portion 40 of such a size as to be capable of covering the exposure window 33 The cover slide 14 also includes an annular portion 42 that encircles a cylindrical shoulder 44 (Fig 5) on the hub 12 The annular portion 42 has at least one keying projection 46 that is closely receivable within a hub keyway 48 whereby the cover slide 14 is positioned and retained on the hub 12 for rotation with the film unit The masking member 16 is opaque and may also be formed of sheet material and has a central aperture 50 of such a size and so located as to admit the hub's shoulder 44 The masking member 16 also includes a window 52 corresponding generally in shape and size to, and aligned with, the exposure window 33 The member 16 is shaped to nest closely within the casing member 18 and is thereby constrained against rotation relative to the member 18.
When the cartridge assembly is not encased in a camera, the film unit is so oriented within the casing 18 (by an initial hub locking mechanism deescribed below) as to place the leaf portion 40 of the cover slide 14 in light-blocking relationship with the exposure window 33 and the window 52 of the masking member Inasmuch as the leaf portion is larger than the aligned windows 33 and 52 between which it is interposed, a labyrinthine light baffling arrangement is created to restrict the access of actinic light rays to the film disc 10 through the windows 33 and 52.
Certain materials, such as poly (ethylene 90 terephthalate), for forming the base sheet of the film disc, may exhibit the ability to "light pipe" (i e distribute impinging light rays internally within the sheet), and thereby fog the photosensitive materials carried 95 by the base sheet even in areas of the base sheet that are remote from the point of impingement As a precaution against such fogging, the film disc 10 has a cut-out notch 54 of truncated sector shape extending in 100 wardly from the outer perimeter 20 of the film disc The notch 54 has an arc length on a circular path P on which lie image areas that is at least as large as the arc length of one of the image areas 65 along that path 105 P (Fig 2) The notch 54, together with the regions of the film disc bordering the notch 54, are overlain by the leaf portion 40 of the cover slide 14 The area of the film disc which is located proximate the aligned ex 110 posure windows 33 and 52 is thus minimized by the notch 54 so as further to protect the film disc from any scattered light rays which may infiltrate through the labyrinthine light lock such as during prolonged exposure of 115 the cartridge assembly to a light source.
Figure 5 depicts an enlarged partial crosssectional view through a cartridge assembly.
As seen therein, the cartridge assembly components are retained in assembled relation 120 ship by the engagement of the hub 12 and the hub support 19 The hub support 19, which is disposed within the circular opening 36 in the first wall 30 of the casing, includes a generally circular base plate 38 having an 125 annular shelf 41 on which the margin of the casing wall 30 bounding the opening 36 is seated and is adhered by an adhesive A key 37 (see Fig 1) on the first wall 30 cooperates with a keyway 39 on the hub sup 130 1,597,073 port 19 preliminarily to orient the support 19 during manufacturing operations A cylindrical wall 57 extends from the base plate 38 and has, on its radially outer surface, a groove 58 extending around the circumference of wall 57 At its distal end, the cylindrical wall 57 has a frusto-conical face 60, as shown in Fig 5 When the support 19 and the hub 12 are assembled, the cylindrical wall 57 telescopes within a cylindrical wall 61 of the hub 12 A plurality of radially inwardly projecting latching teeth 59 are distributed along the wall 61, each such tooth including an inclined camming surface 62 During assembly operations, sliding angagement between the camming surfaces 62 and the frusto-conical face 60 guides the walls 57 and 61 into telescoping engagement and the resultant wedging action produces some slight flexing D of one or both of the walls 57 and 61 to permit the latching teeth 59 to slide axially along the wall 57 until they snap into latching engagement with the circumferential groove 58 The groove 58 and the latching teeth 59 provide a reliable but relatively loose fitting latching engagement so as to retain the hub 12 and the support 19 in telescoping relationship while permitting rotation of the hub relative to the hub support The telescoped walls 57 and 61 additionally cooperate to define a labyrinthine light lock tending to protect the film disc 10 from fogging by light rays which may enter any of the several openings in the hub or hub support that are surrounded by the walls 57, 61 An annular shoulder portion 63 of the hub support 19 cooperates with an annular recess 64 at the base of wall 61 to provide an additional labyrinthine barrier protecting the film disc from fogging.
When it is necessary to remove the film unit from the cartridge assembly for photographic processing, the hub 2 may be unlatched from the hub support 19 by inserting a suitable e g a wedge-shaped, probe into coring holes 55 which are associated with each of the latching teeth 59 The holes 55 also facilitate injection molding of the latch teeth By means of the inserted probe, the wall 57 and/or the hub 12 may be flexed to release the teeth 59 from the circumferential groove 58, thereby unlatching the hub from the hub support The casing 18 may be opened, for extraction of the film unit assembly, by slitting or tearing Preparatory to processing, the cover slide 14, since it is not permanently affixed to the hub 12 and since its function is completed after the film unit is removed from the cartridge assembly, may be stripped from the hub 12 and discarded thereby also eliminating the possibility of photographic processing fluid being entrapped between the cover slide nnd the film disc 10 Similarly, the masking member 16, being only loosely retained on the hub 12 is stripped from the film, unit and discarded Both the cover slide 14 and the masking member 16 may be provided with structurally weakened tearlines to facili 70 tate their removal from the hub.
The film disc 10 is capable of recording photographic images in a plurality of image areas 65 (see Fig 2) which are spaced along the circular path P that is concentric with 75 an axis A of the film unit (which axis A is defined by the centre of a circular bore 116 in the hub 12 See Fig 2) The path P is disposed between the outer perimeter of the hub 12 and the outer perimeter 20 of the film 80 disc Desirably, the image areas 65 are bounded by a surrounding border region 67 which has been photographically preexposed (sometimes called "pre-flashed") prior to exposure of the image areas 65 in 85 a camera Such pre-exposure may be included as part of the cartridge assembly manufacturing operation and, in combination with the indexing means described below, ensures that the latent images gener 90 ated on the photosensitive film disc due to exposure in a camera will lie, if at all, in predetermined locations (i e, the image areas) on the sheet.
In order that an image area 65 may be 95 precisely positioned for exposure by a camera (or positioned at the gate of a printer, viewer or other apparatus) the hub 12 has a plurality of generally radially extending indexing teeth 114, which are disposed in 100 a generally circular path along the perimeter of the hub 12 The number of teeth 114 corresponds to the number of image areas 65 (For illustrative purposes, ten teeth 114 are shown spaced 300 apart with an open 105 arc of 90 radially aligned with the notch 54) Each image area 65 bears the same predetermined spatial relationship to a corresponding index tooth 114 as each of the other image areas 65 bears to its correspond 110 ing tooth 114 and this same relationship is desirably maintained in all film units of the form described herein By precisely positioning the teeth 114 on the hub 12 in predetermined relationship with the respective 115 image areas 65 as described above, a given the relative durability and resistance to deimage area may be precisely located by mechanically engaging and positioning its associated indexing tooth 114 Because of 120 formation of the indexing teeth 114 as opposed, for example, to a simple film perforation as is commonly used in other film metering or indexing arrangements, the film unit can be repeatedly positioned with reli 125 ability, thereby facilitating post-exposure indexing operations such as printing and viewing.
To enable the photographer to determine which one of the several image areas 65 is 130 1,597,073 positioned for exposure, an exposure numbering system is provided as seen with reference to Figures 3 and 5 Figure 3 depicts a series of through-bores 120 formed in the hub support 19 and spaced along a circular path, concentric with the axis A, at the same angular pitch as the exposure areas 65 are located on their path P Each through-bore has associated with it an exposure area identification number 122 which is carried on the hub support 19 and which corresponds to one of the image areas 65, as may be seen in Fig 3 An L-shaped foot member 124, carried by the hub 12 at a predetermined location relative to the image areas 65, has a surface 126 facing the hub support 19 and-so located as to overlie the circular path along which the through-bores in the support 19 are disposed The surface 126 preferably is coated with a highly visible light-reflective material As the hub 12 is indexed, the surface 126 registers successively with respective ones of the throughbores 120 and is visible, in use, through a camera cover door window 436 (see Fig.
19) to indicate visually to the user which of the image areas is in position for exposure.
It will be apparent that rotation of the film unit while the cartridge assembly is not housed within a camera or other light-tight means would result in the exposure of at least those image areas that are rotated past the cartridge assembly exposure window 33 and, perhaps, in the fogging of adjacent image areas It will also be apparent that to rotate the film unit through more than one complete revolution would result in doubly exposing at least one of the image areas.
Accordingly, a feature of the cartridge assembly is a two-mode hub locking mechanism that is housed entirely within the cartridge assembly In one locking mode rotation of the film unit is prevented prior to insertion of the cartridge assembly in a camera, and includes means for cooperating with the camera to release the film unit for rotation and may serve also to lock the film unit relative to the assembly after all image areas have been exposed The other locking mode precludes rotation of the film unit through more than one complete revolution.
If locked in the first mode after exposure, or in the second mode, the lock preferably cannot be released by re-inserting an exposed cartridge into the camera.
Reference is now made to Figure 4 which depicts the hub locking mechanism in an initial locking position wherein rotation is prevented prior to insertion of the cartridge assembly in a camera As seen therein the hub support 19 carries an eloniate f Vvyhle spring finger 128 attached at its proximal end to the support 19 The finfier 128 has a distal end 129 which is so disposed as to engage a latch member 130 carried by the hub 12 Prior to insertion of the cartridge assembly into a camera the distal end 129 of the spring finger 128 lies within (as seen in phantom in Figures 8 and 10) an initial latching detent 132 formed on the underside 70 of the latch member 130 Initial locking engagement of the finger's distal end 129with the latching detent 132 precludes rotation of the hub 12 relative to the hub support 19 Because the locking mechanism is 75 placed in the initial locking position during a cartridge assembly manufacturing operation, inadvertent film unit rotation (with probable resultant film exposure) is precluded prior to insertion of the cartridge as 80 sembly into a cooperating camera Upon insertion of the cartridge into a camera, a camera's coupling pin 433, being of an appropriate length, penetrates the drive bore 118 and contacts a raised boss 134 on the 85 facing surface of the finger 128 (see also Fig.
9) Contact by the pin 433 flexes the finger 128 downward (as seen in Figs 8 and 9) thereby freeing its distal end 129 from the initial latching detent 132 and releasing the 90 hub 12 for rotation relative to the hub support 19 As the hub 12 is rotated, the coupling pin 433 slides off the raised boss 134 and the finger's distal end 129 is cammed along one of the downward-facing cam sur 95 faces 133, 135 (Fig 10) of the latch member until, depending upon the direction of hub rotation, it slides from beneath the tip 136 or 138 of one of the tapered wings 140, 142 of the latch 130 and flexes upward to 100 a neutral position as shown in Figure 4 Because the hub 12 is so mounted on the hub support 19 as to be rotatable in both clockwise and counterclockwise directions and because the latch 130 is symmetrically struc 105 tured it is apparent that the hub 12 may be rotated in either direction following unlatching and, as described below, may also be relatched regardless of the direction of rotation 110 Alternatively, the spring finger 128 may be freed from the first latching detent by means of a modified form (not shown) of a camera's spindle 432 (See Figs.
8 and 19) In such an arrange 115 ment, a spindle that is appropriately longer than the camera spindle 432 shown in such Figures penetrates the bore 116 a distance sufficient to contact the spring finger 128 and depress it to release the distal end 120 129 of the finger from the initial latching detent 132 Because the spindle 432 coincides with the hub's axis of rotation A, a lengthened spindle as described above bears continually on the finger 128 In such an ar 125 rangement the length of the spindle must be carefully chosen to avoid depressing the distal end 129 of the finger 128 below the tips 136, 138 of the tapered wings 140, 142.
Referring now to the description of the 130
1,597,073 illustrated embodiment, if the film unit is to be rotated by the hub through 3600, as the hub approaches a complete revolution, the spring finger 128 again encounters the latch member 130 However, as seen in progressing phantom positions in Figure 6, the spring finger 128, (having snapped upward into its neutral position after being released from the coupling pin and the latch member) encounters, depending on the direction of rotation, one of the upwardly facing cam surfaces 144, 146 of the latch member 130.
Continued rotation after such contact cams the distal end 129 upward and carries it into a final locking detent 148 that is positioned atop the latch member 130, as seen in Figures 11 and 12 As also seen in Figure 11, the finger 128, having been flexed upwardly beyond its neutral position by the camming action of one of the surfaces 144, 146, tends to remain engaged in the final locking detent 148 and resist being dislodged The pin 433 is now unable to perform its unlocking function because, even though the pin 433 bears on the boss 134 it exerts only a downwardlyapplied force that forces the distal end into the final locking detent 148 and is incapable of releasing the finger from the final locking detent Having assumed the final locking position, it is apparent that the hub 12 cannot be rotated relative to the hub support 19 even if the finally locked assembly is removed from and re-inserted into a camera.
Because the fan-shaped leaf portion 40 of the cover slide 14 of a finally locked cartridge assembly is in light-blocking relationship with the framing window 52, the latent images recorded on the disc 10 are protected until the film unit is removed from the cartridge assembly for photographic processing.
Figs 13 and 14 show an alternative mechanism for initial and final lock between the hub 12 and the hub support 19 The support 19 includes a first flexible locking finger 190 having a bearing surface 193 which engages a cooperating bearing surface 194 on the hub to prevent counterclockwise rotation of the hub Upon insertion in a camera, a pin 433 on the camera pushes finger 190 axially to release the bearing surfaces 193 and 194 from mutual engagement to permit such counter-clockwise rotation.
A second flexible locking finger 191 on the hub support has a protrusion 195 which initially engages a surface 198 of lug 192 on the hub initially to prevent clockwise rotation of the hub After release from the first locking finger 190, the hub is rotated by the camera in a counter-clockwise direction whereby the lug 192 rides off the surface 199 of the finger 191 and in so doing flexes it to the broken line positions shown in Fig.
13 The hub can be rotated by the camera through 3600 until the lug 192 engages a slot 196 (shown in Fig 14) in the second locking finger 191 During the last portion of the allowed rotation the lug 192 bears against the radially inner surface of the finger 191 progressively deflecting through the broken line positions shown in Fig 14, 70 until the finger springs radially inwardly with the slot 196 embracing the lug 192.
With the lug 192 in the slot 196 a permanent final lock is provided between the hub and the hub support 75 In a camera driving arrangement disclosed more fully in Figures 19 to 30, or in a further embodiment disclosed in Figures 34 to 37, the film unit may be rotated through an angle which is sufficient to bring all of the 80 image areas sequentially into registry with the cartridge exposure window but which is less than one complete revolution The direction of the film unit rotation is thereupon reversed and the unit is returned to its 85 initial position It will be apparent that the locking arrangement herein described are suited to accommodate such an alternative camera design As indicated above, owing to the double-taper symmetrical design of 90 the latch member 130, i e the presence of oppositely facing wings 140 and 14-2, the spring finger 128 may approach and enter the final locking detent 148 by climbing either of the upward-facing cam surfaces 95 144, 146 Final locking is thereby assured regardless of whether the direction of rotation associated with final locking is the same as or opposite to the direction of rotation associated with unlocking 100 In the embodiment illustrated in Figs 13 and 14, a radially outwardly curved nose 197 ensures that if the lug 192 approaches in a clockwise direction, the finger will be cammed outward until the lug 192 enters 105 the slot 196 at which time the finger 191 springs back.
Another feature affords means for providing a visual indication that the cartridge assembly is in the final locking configura 110 tion, thereby avoiding confusion arising from attempted re-use of an exposed cartridge.
In the embodiment illustrated in Figs 1 to 12, a coring hole 150 located in the hub 12 and positioned above the latch member 115 provides visual access to the distal end 129 of the spring finger 128 when the finger 128 is in the final locking detent 148 By colouring the upper surface of the end 129 of the finger 128 with a highly-visible light 120 reflective coating, and perhaps by also providing appropriate information on a label proximate the hole 150, the appearance of the coloured end 129 of the finger 128 in the hole 150 reminds the user that the film unit 125 has been completely exposed.
In the arrangement illustrated in Figs 13 and 14 this visual indication that the cartridge is in the final locking configuration is provided by a flag which is cammed up by 130 1,597,073 the radially outward deflection of the finger 191 under the camming influence of the lug 192.
A further feature in the illustrated embodiments is one which contributes to more precise positioning of the film disc 10 with respect to the focal plane of a camera Such precise positioning is achieved by affording intimate contact between the film and camera by minimizing, or at least closely controlling, cartridge structures interposed between the film disc and the camera supporting structure As will be described in more detail hereinafter, at least immediately prior to and during an exposure, the first wall 30 of the cartridge is contacted at the exposure station of the camera 401 by a spring-biased pressure plate 438 (see Fig.
25) The first wall 30 is thinned (relative, at least, to the double-layered second wall 32) and is thus relatively flexible at least in the region thereof that is interposed between the pressure plate 438 and the film disc 10 A rectangular film support frame 435 of a camera is of such size and shape as to penetrate the windows 33 and 52 of the cartridge assembly and contact directly on the surface 13 of the film disc Images may then be recorded on the film Because of the thinness of the first wall 30 of the cartridge in the region where it is contacted by the pressure plate 438, the image area 65 of the film disc 10 that is positioned for exposure is assured of being urged by the pressure plate 438 into close contact with the support frame 435, and this accurately positioned in the focal plane of the camera.
Figs 15 to 19 show cross-sectional views of modified structures of the portion of the first wall 30 opposite the rectangular exposure window 33 In each case, the first wall 30 is constructed of relatively ripid plastic to protect the film unit, and contains a window 180 covered by a structure better able to transmit the force of a pressure plate 438 to the film unit Fig 15 illustrates a thin flexible web 181 of opaque plastic disposed across the window 180 and bonded to the wall around the window Fig 16 illustrates an integrally formed but thinned portion 182 of the opaque wall 30 having a fold 185 to facilitate displacement of the portion 182 Fig 17 illustrates a thick plastic insert 183 held in the window by a thin opaque flexible web 184 sealed to the wall around the window.
In the camera described hereinafter, a movable pressure-relieving finger 441 (Fig.
28) is actuated to allow the pressure plate 438 to press the film disc into contact with the support frame 435 at least immediately prior to and during exposure and is actuated to hold the pressure plate 438 out of clamping engagement at least during times when the film disc may be moved relative to the frame 435 In this way forced contact of the film disc with the frame is avoided when there is relative movement between them Such forced contact during 70 relative movement might cause damage to the photosensitive materials of the imaging surface 13.
In an alternative construction of cartridge assembly (not shown) the framing window 75 52 in the masking member 16 is approximately the same size as image area 65 In such an arrangement, the support frame 435 of a camera does not penetrate the window 52 but, rather, penetrates only the window 80 33 and rests upon the margins of the masking member 16 which bound the window 52.
Because the masking member 16 is desirably formed of a thin, flat sheet material of relatively uniform thickness, accurate position 85 ing of the image area 65 to be exposed relative to the support frame 435 may be attained even though the frame does not directly contact the film disc.
A preferred embodiment of a camera 90 according to the invention is illustrated in Figs 18 to 30 and may be called a manual film advance camera, which refers to the fact that the energy required to accomplish each successive indexing movement of the 95 film disc is derived from a corresponding manual movement of a film advancing member.
Fig 18 depicts the camera 401 in its operative position and shows the front wall 402 100 of the camera provided with an objective lens 403, a viewfinder lens 404 and a window 405 associated with a photosensitive element of an automatic exposure control device A rectangular shutter operating button 406 is 105 located in the top wall 407 of the camera housing 408 and is substantially flush with the top wall 407 Fig 19 shows the camera 401 inverted from the position shown in Fig.
18 and turned end for end so that its back 110 end wall 409 is visible A cover door 411, which is shown in its open position in Fig.
19, is attached to the camera housing by hinges 412 When closed, the door 411 is in light-tight cooperation with the camera 115 housing and is retained in that position by a latching device that is releasable by a slidable latch release button 413 adiacent the rear viewfinder lens 414 in the back wall 409 Operating ear 415 of a pivotally mov 120 able film advancing lever is partially visible in Fig 19, and is substantially flush with the camera housing except during a film advancing operation From these two figures, 18 and 19, it will be apparent that the camera 125 is very compact and streamlined and is notably free of protruding elements which might interfere with conveniently carrying it in a shirt pocket or the like.
Because Figs 19 to 30 all illustrate camera 130 1,597,073 mechanisms in the same inverted orientation shown in Fig 19, relative positional terms, such as above and below, used in describing those figures will be understood to relate to that inverted mode of orientation For example, in referring to Fig 19, film cartridge assembly 11 would be described as being above the camera 401.
As best shown in Fig 19, the interior of the camera housing 408 defines a shallow internal pocket 416 of the same asymmetrical peripheral shape as the casing of the film cartridge assembly and with a central circular cavity 417 intended to receive the film disc's hub 12 The camera housing 408 forms lateral walls 418 and 419 and end wall 421 of the pocket 416 and its remaining end wall 422 and diagonal corner walls 423-426 are formed by a cover plate 427 which is held in place by screws 428 A circular central opening 429 in the cover plate 427 exposes a rotatable circular driving disc 431 pivotally supported by a stationary hub spindle 432 The driving disc 431, in turn, carries a coupling pin 433, equivalent to the pin 433 shown in Figs 8 and 11 A rectangular opening 434 in the cover plate 427 accommodates a rectangular film support frame 435, which extends slightly above the adjacent flat face of the cover plate 427 When the cartridge assembly is installed in the pocket 416, a) the spindle hole 116 in the hub 12 receives the end of spindle 432 b) the driving pin 433 enters the coupling hole 118 in the hub; and c) the film support frame 435 enters the cartridge assembly's rectangular film exposure window 33 Because of the asymmetry of the cartridge assembly and the corresponding configuration of the pocket 416.
the cartridge assembly cannot be inserted into the pocket 416 except in this proper orientation When the cover door 411 is closed following installation of the film cartridge assembly, a transparent cover door window 436 bears against the hub support plate 19 of the cartridge assembly and maintains the hub 12 in contact with the driving disc 431 A circular window rim 437, integral with the camera's cover door 411, surrounds the hub support 19 of the cartridge assembly for light locking purposes.
A rectangular pressure platen 438 is attached to the cover door by a pair of resilient spring arms 439 which bias it away from the door When the door is closed, the platen 438 is aligned with the film support frame 435, but is held out of clamping engagement with the film cartridge assembly by the en a gement of an ear M 40 on the pressure platen 438 with a pressure relieving finger 441 which proiects through an opening 442 in the cover plate 427 adjacent the film support frame 435.
A mechanism plate 443, preferably made of relatively heavy sheet metal, is best shown in Figs 20 to 22 This plate is rigidly supported within the camera housing below the cover plate 427, which is spaced slightly above the mechanism plate 443 by spacer means, not shown For example, screws 428 70 can extend through the cover plate 427, through spacer washers, through holes in the mechanism plate 443, one of which is at numeral 444, and into threaded bosses moulded into the camera housing 408 The 75 mechanism plate 443 supports the principal operative mechanical and optical camera components as a unitary subassembly, thereby facilitating assembly and servicing of the camera and ensuring permanent stability in 80 the relation of those components to one another.
The hub spindle 432, shown in detail in Fig 23, is permanently staked to the mechanism plate 443 by its riveted lip 445 and 85 rotatably supports the circular driving disc 431 and a film advancing lever 446 The upper end of the spindle 432 fits accurately into the spindle hole 116 in the hub 12 of the film cartridge assembly and thereby 90 precisely defines the axis of rotation of the film disc 10 When the cartridge assembly is received in the camera with its hub 12 in engagement with the spindle 94, the film support frame 435 extends though the exposure 95 window 33 of the catridge assembly casing and engages the face of the sector-shape portion 40 of the cover slide 14 Rotation of the cover slide portion 40 out of alignment with the casing window 33 allows the window 100 52 in the baffle sheet 16 to pass around the frame 435 whereby the frame engages and supports the emulsion surface of the film disc 10 just outside the periphery of the film exposure area 65 105 The film support frame 435 is an integral part of a gate member 447, best shown in Figs 24 and 25, which is immovably attached to the mechanism plate 443 by screws 448 with the frame extending upwardly 110 through the opening 434 in the cover plate 427 The frame 435 is cantilevered from the remainder of the gate member to provide a slot 449 between the frame 435 and the mechanism plate 443 to accommodate blades 115 451 and 452 of the camera's shutter A rectangular opening 453 in the frame is aligned with a similarly shaped opening 454 in the mechanism plate 443, such openings 453 and 454 being slightly larger than the pre-defined 120 exposure areas 65 of the film disc 10 To prevent deflection or bending of the frame 435, a support post 455 is located at the otherwise unsupported end of the frame 435 outside the movement path of the shutter 125 blades 451 and 452 and bears against an ear 456 of the mechanism plate 443 Below the openings 453 and 454, a prism 457 is rigidly supported to the mechanism plate 443 by a bracket 458 in optical alignment with the 130 1,597,073 camera's objective lens 403, which is also preferably supported either to the gate member 447 or the mechanism plate 443 The axis of the objective lens 403 is substantially parallel to the plane of the film cartridge.
The prism 457, (or equivalent mirror) bends the optical path through a 90 angle so that the focal plane of the lens 403 is coincident with the predetermined flat film plane defined by a flat upper film engaging face 459 of the film support frame 435 During each exposure of the imaging surface 13 of the film disc 10, the pressure platen 438 resiliently bears against the flexible casing of the film cartridge assembly and thereby presses the corresponding region 65 of the film disc 10 against the face 459 of the film support frame 435 to position the film exposure area accurately in coincidence with the plane defined by that face 459 Alternatively, the window 52 in the baffle sheet 16 could be smaller than the window 33 in the casing and the face 459 of the film support frame 435 could engage the region of the baffle sheet 16 surrounding its window 52, in which case the thickness of the baffle sheet 16 would be compensated for in establishing coincidence between the film plane and the focal plane of the objective lens.
The single reflecting surface in the optical path produces a reversed image, but this reversal can be corrected for projection or printing purposes, either by inverting the processed film disc in the projector or printer or by incorporating another single reflecting element in the projection path of such an apparatus Fig 28 shows the various lenses constituting the viewfinder except for its front lens 404, all of such lenses being located along an axis 461 located below the mechanism plate 443 and substantially parallel to the axis of the objective lens 403.
To provide a single lens reflex type of camera construction, the reflective surface of prism 457 can be partially light transmissive and aligned with the axis of appropriate viewfinder elements, or a movable mirror can be substituted for that prism, as is well known in the prior art.
As best illustrated in Figs 20 and 23, the circular driving disc 431 is provided on its lower face with a pinion gear 462 meshed with gear teeth 463 of a sector plate 464 that is pivotally supported to the mechanism plate 443 by a stud 465 for arcuate movement between two stationary stop pins 466 and 467 A relatively strong hairpin spring 468 biases the sector plate 464 in a counterclockwise direction Whenever the camera is in an unloaded condition, the spring 468 holds the sector plate 464 against pin 466, as shown in Fig 20 Accordingly, the coupling pin 433 on the driving disc 431 is positioned to be received in the cartridge hub '-oupling hole 118 of a film cartridge assembly being loaded into the camera An arcuate ratchet tooth segment 469 of the sector plate 464 is engageable by a releasable ratchet pawl 471 under the influence of a spring 472 to limit rotation of the film 70 disc's hub 12 to a counterclockwise direction.
The film advancing lever 446 (Fig 20) includes an arm 473 that extends through a slot 474 in lateral wall 419 of the camera 75 housing 408 An ear 476 extends downwardly from arm 473 through an arcuate slot 477 in the mechanism plate 443 and is attached to a relatively strong spring 478 that biases the lever 446 in a counterclockwise 80 direction toward the position shown in Fig.
20, on which arm 473 is in abutment with end 479 of slot 474 By means of the operating ear 415 at the end of arm 473, a photographer can manually rotate lever 446 85 through an angle of somewhat more than degrees to the position shown in Fig 21, which movement is limited by the abutment of the arm 473 against the opposite end 481 of slot 474 90 An advancing pawl 482 is pivotally mounted to the advancing lever 446 by a stud 483 extending through an elongate slot 484 in the pawl 482 A coil spring 485 connects the advancing pawl 482 to the film ad 95 vancing lever 446 to resiliently bias the pawl 482 toward the position shown in Fig 20.
In this position the pawl 482 bears against a pin 486 on lever 446 with the end of slot 484 which is located about midway along 100 the arcuate length of the pawl 482, in contact with stud 483 When the advancing lever 446 is positioned as shown in Fig 20, an advancing tooth 487 of the advancing pawl 482 is located adjacent the film support 105 frame 435 near the centre of the 90 arc of the film disc's hub which lacks index ears 114, which is shown in phantom lines in Figs 20, 21, and 22 As the photographer moves lever 446 from the position shown in 110 Fig 20 to the position shown in Fig 21, the advancing tooth 487 moves along an arcuate path coincident with the movement path of the hub index ears 114 When this movement brings the sloped face 488 of the 115 tooth 487 into contact with the hub index ear 114 a, corresponding to the first available exposure area on the film disc, the engagement of the ratchet pawl 471 with the sector plate 464 prevents the tooth 487 from 120 rotating the hub 12 in a clockwise direction.
The tooth 487 therefore cams past the index ear 114 a by overcoming the biasing force of spring 485 and moves to the position in which it is shown in Fig 21 125 A positioning pawl 489 is pivotally mounted to the mechanism plate 443 by an eccentric pivot stud 491 and is biased in a counterclockwise direction by a spring 492.
A leg 493 of the positioning pawl 489 carries 130 1,597,073 a positioning tooth 494 that is located adjacent the advancing tooth 487 when the advancing pawl is positioned as shown in Figs 20 and 22 As best shown in Fig 26, the positioning tooth 494 lies below the advancing tooth 487 and an upwardly turned ear 495 on the positioning pawi 489 engages the adjacent edge of the advancing pawl 482 to establish the location of the positioning pawl 489 when the film advancing lever 446 is in the position shown in Figs 20, 22 and 26 A second leg 496 of pawl 489 has a cam surface 497 engageable by a cam pin 498 on the film advancing lever 446 When the lever 446 is in its initial position, shown in Fig 20, the pin 498 is out of engagement with the cam surface 497 and the positioning tooth 494 is positioned to intercept the index ear 114 a of the cartridge hub 12 as the latter is rotated Whenever the advancing lever 446 is displaced by more than approximately 100 from its initial position, however, the cooperation between the cam surface 497 and the cam pin 498 pivots the pawl 489 to the position shown in Fig 21, thereby moving the positioning tooth 494 beyond the movement path of the hub's index ears 114.
As the advancing lever 446 is returned by the spring 478 from the position shown in Fig 21 to the position show,,n in Fig 2 Q a radial face 499 of the advancing tooth 487 engages the index ear 114 a aid thfrc Icy rotates the film disc's hub 12 and the driving disc 431 in an anti-clockwise direction in opposition to the spring 468 During the final portion of the return movement of the lever 446 toward its initial position, the cam pin 498 disengages from the cam surface 497 of the positioning pawl 489 and the spring 492 causes the positioning tooth 494 to move back into the path of movement of the index ear 114 a which then abuts against that tooth 494 As shown in Fig 22, this abutment between the index ear 114 a and the positioning tooth 494 occurs slightly before the spring 478 has returned the arm 473 of the lever 446 into contact with the end face 479 of slot 474 Because the spring 478 is stronger than the spring 485, the pawl 482 is displaced slightly endwise relative to lever 446, in opposition to the spring 485; whereby the advancing tooth 447 resiliently clamps index ear 114 a against a radial face 201 of the positioning tooth 494 The indexing accuracy with which the film exposure area is located in exposure position is thus determined solely by the accuracy with which the central spindle hole 116 in the hub 12 fits the spindle 432 and by the location of the positioning tooth 494 To simplify the manufacture of the camera, the eccentric pivot stud 491, best shown in Fig 27, is riveted to the mechanism plate 443 as shown as numeral 202 but can nevertheless be rotated by means of screwdriver slot 203.
The cylindrical bearing surface 204 of the stud 491 that extends though a spacer washer 205 and through a mating hole 206 in the pawl 489 is slightly eccentric relative to the 70 axis of the stud shank 207, thereby allowing a factory adjustment of the position of the positioning tooth 494 Once this adjustment has been made, the accuracy of the mechanism is preserved by the fact that the 75 spindle 432, stud 491, the gate member and the optical elements 403 and 457 are all rigidly affixed to the one-piece mechanism plate 443.
After the first exposure area 65 has been 80 exposed, as described later, a second reciprocative movement of the lever 446 causes the advancing tooth 487 to engage the hub's index ear 114 b and to rotate the hub 12 to bring that ear 114 b into engagement with 85 the positioning tooth 494 As previously described, the cooperation between the cam surface 497 and the cam pin 498 causes the positioning tooth 494 to disengage from the index ear 114 a before the pawl 482 initi 90 ates the counterclockwise rotation of the hub 12, and to return the positioning tooth 494 to its operative location before the next index ear 114 b arrives at its indexed posi-tion After the operation of indexing the film 95 disc 10 has been repeated ten times and the final exposure area has been brought into exposure position, the 900 ear-free arc of the hub 12 is located in the clockwise directio 31 from the advancing tooth 487, where 100 by the arcuate travel of that tooth 487 is insufficient to re-engage it with the index ear 114 a Accordingly, further reciprocation of lever 446 has no effect on the position of the film disc 10 which is 105 additionally prevented from moving further in a counterclockwise direction by the abutment of the sector plate 464 against the stop pin 467.
If, during the previously described index 110 ing operations, the film disc 10 should jam within the cartridge assembly casing, the spring biased stud 483 and slot 484 connection between the pawl 482 and film advancing lever 486, prevents the photographer 115 from damaging the camera mechanism by attempting to force the lever 446 back to its initial position.
Because of the spacing of the hub's index ears 114, the first indexing operation re 120 quires the film advancing lever 446 to be reciprocated through an angle of slightly more than 45 degrees, but subsequent indexing operations require the lever 446 to be moved through an angle of only slightly 125 more than 30 degrees However, as explained below, the shutter cocking operation requires that the lever 446 be reciprocated through its maximum angular movement each time the film disc 10 is advanced To 130 al 1,597,073 ensure such maximum movement of the lever 446, an anti-short-stroke dog 208, shown in Figs 21 and 22, is pivotally carried by the stud 465 below the sector plate 464 and is resiliently biased to its depicted central position by a wire spring 209 which is staked into a slot in dog 208 and extends freely between pins 211 During the movement of the lever 446 from the position shown in Fig 20 to the position shown in Fig 21, arcuately disposed teeth 212 along the adjacent edge of the lever 446 engage a finger 213 of the dog 208 and rotate the dog in a counterclockwise direction as those teeth 212 move past the dog finger 213 in ratchet fashion Consequently, once the clockwise movement of the lever 446 is initiated, that lever cannot rotate in the opposite direction until it has reached the position shown in Fig 21 at which an arcuate notch 214 in the lever 446 is aligned with the dog tooth 213 and allows the dog 446 to reassume its depicted central position During the subsequent return movement of the lever 446, the dog 208 performs in the same manner as the teeth 212 displace it in a clockwise direction When the lever 446 arrives at its initial position, an arcuate notch 215 is aligned with the dog 208, which therefore again assumes its central position.
The shutter mechanism, which is best depicted in Fig 28 comprises an opening member 216 and a closing member 217, both of which are made of thin sheet steel These two members 216, 217 are pivotally supported below the mechanism plate 443 between washers 218 by the lower end shank 219 of the spindle 432 as shown in Fig 23, and are retained on that shank by a snap ring 221 Two springs, represented at numerals 222 and 223 in Fig 28, bias the respective opening and closing shutter members 216 and 217 in a counterclockwise direction.
The shutter members 216 and 217 have legs 224 and 225, respectively, which include respective upwardly bent portions 226 and 227 that extend through corresponding arcuate openings 228 and 229 in the mechanism plate 143, shown in Figs 20-22 Opening and closing shutter blades 451 and 452, carried by the respective shutter member legs 224 and 225, are parallel to the mechanism plate 443 and are in alignment with the shutter blade slot 449 below the films support frame 435.
Fig 20 depicts the camera with its shutter in released condition, in which the opening shutter blade 451 slightly overlaps the closing shutter blade 452 with the latter blade obscuring the rectangular opening 453 of the film support frame 435 In this condition, the position of the opening member 216 is established by the engagement of its upwardly bent portion 226 with the adjacent end of the mechanism plate opening 228 and the position of the closing member 217 is established by the abutment of its leg 225 with a downwardly bent ear 233 of the opening member 216, shown in Fig 28 As the film advancing lever 446 is rotated in a clockwise direction, an edge 234 of that lever 446 engages the upwardly bent portion 226 of the opening member 216 and moves the two blades 452, 453 in unison in a clockwise direction.
When the clockwise movement of the shutter members 216, 217 has brought the opening blade 451 into alignment with the film support frame opening 453, as shown in solid lines in Fig 28, a latch tooth 235 on the opening shutter member 216 is engaged by a primary latch member 236, which is pivotally mounted to the mechanism plate 443 by a pin 237 and is biased in a clockwise direction by a hairpin spring 238 A secondary latch member 239, pivotally mounted to the mechanism plate 443 by a pin 241 and biased in a clockwise direction by a hairpin spring 242, similarly engages a latch tooth 243 on the closing shutter member 217 Accordingly, the two shutter members 216, 217 are held in their respective cocked positions as the advancing lever 446 returns to its initial position to complete the film indexing and shutter cocking operation.
As also shown in Fig 28, an ear 244 on the leg 225 of the closing shutter member 217 is in engagement with the adjacent end face of an electromagnet 245 when the shut 100 ter is in its cocked condition This electromagnet 245 is carried by a support member 246 that is pivotally supported to the mechanism plate 443 by a rivet 247 and is biased in a counterclockwise direction by a spring 105 248 for movement though a narrow arcuate path limited by a stationary pin 249 extending into a slot 251 in the support member 246 This movable mounting of the electromagnet 245 allows it to engage the ear 110 244 of the closing shutter member 217 when the latter is in its cocked position, while allowing that member 217 to be moved slightly beyond its cocked position by the film advancing lever 446 during the film in 115 dexing and shutter cocking operation.
When the primary latch member 236 is released from the latch tooth 235 of the opening shutter member 216, as described below, the opening shutter member 216 ro 120 tates rapidly in a counterclockwise direction; thereby removing the opening blade 451 from alignment with the film support frame opening 453 to initiate the exposure of the film area supported by the film support 125 frame 435 As the opening shutter member 216 approaches its released position shown in Fig 20, a cam nose 252 on the opening shutter member 216 engages the rounded tip of the secondary latch member 239 engaged 130 1,597,073 with the latch tooth 243 on the closing shutter member 217 and pivots that latch member 239 out of engagement with the closing shutter member 217 If the camera's exposure control circuit has not energized the electromagnet 245, the release of the secondary latch member 239 causes the closing shutter member 217 immediately to pivot in a counterclockwise direction so that its blade 452 covers the opening 453 in the film support frame 435, thus providing a mechanically predetermined exposure duration However, if the automatic exposure control system requires a longer exposure duration, the electromagnet 245 retains the closing shutter member 217 in its cocked position until the electromagnet is de-energized, whereupon the shutter closes.
Because this general type of automatic exposure control system is well known in the prior art, details of the electronic circuitry associated with controlling the energization of the electromagnet have been omitted.
Shutter release rocker 253, shown in Figs.
28 and 29, is supported for rocking movement below the mechanism plate 443 by rivets 254 and 255 extending through ears 256 and 257 of the rocker 253 and through respective tongues 258 and 259 bent downwardly from the mechanism plate 443 The rectangular shutter operating button 406 is attached to the lower face of the rocker 253, as shown in broken lines in Fig 28, and extends through an opening in the camera housing 408 A hairpin spring 260 is coiled around the head of the rivet 254 with one of its legs engaging a finger 261 of the rocker 253 and with its other leg bearing against the mechanism plate 443; thereby urging the release button 406 downwardly towards its extended position At its forward end, the rocker 253 is provided with the finger 441 which projects upwardly through the mechanism and cover plates 443 and 427 and abuts against the ear 440 on the pressure platen 438 when the camera's cover door 411 is closed The spring 260 is strong enough to overcome the tension of the spring arms 439 supporting the pressure platen 438, whereby the latter is retained out of clamping engagement with the film cartridge assembly as long as the shutter operating button 406 remains in its extended position.
A release slide 262, shown in Figs 28 and 29, is slidably mounted to the lower face of the mechanism plate 443 by a stationary rivet 263 extending through a slot 264 and is biased toward the right and also in a counterclockwise direction by a spring 265.
When the slide 262 is in its cocked position shown in solid lines in Fig 28, its latch tooth 266 is engaged with a finger 267 of a latching tab 268, which extends upwardly from the rocker 253, as best illustrated in Fig 29 When the shutter operating button 406 is depressed, the corresponding upward movement of the finger 267 causes it to disengage from the latch tooth 266, whereupon the spring 265 moves the slide 262 to the 70 right to the position shown in broken lines in Fig 28, which is defined by the abutment of the left end of the slot 264 with the rivet 263 During this movement, a releasing ear 271 on the slide 262 engages a lower finger 75 272 of the primary latch member 236 and releases the latch member 236 from engagement with the opening shutter member latch tooth 235 to initiate the operation of the shutter As previously mentioned, prior to 80 releasing the shutter, the movement of the finer 441 causes the pressure plate 438 to squeeze the exposure area 65 of the film disk 10 into engagement with the film support frame 435 to ensure that the film ex 85 posure area is securely held in flat condition during its exposure.
As shown in Figs 20, 21, 22 and 28, a cocking pin 273 projects downwardly from the film advancing lever 446 through an 90 arcuate slot 274 in the mechanism plate 143 This pin 273 is adapted to engage tongue 275 on release slide 262, shown in Figs 28 and 29, to restore that slide 262 to its cocked condition shown in Fig 28 when 95 lever 446 is again moved to the position shown in Fig 21 During this recocking movement of the slide 262, it pivots slightly in a clockwise direction out of contact with a guide pin 276 as the latch tooth 266 cams 100 past the finger 267 of the latching tab 268.
A stop pin 277, extending upwardly from the shutter release rocker 253, projects through the end of slot 274 in the mechanism plate 443 beyond the movement path 105 of the pin 273 and is flush with the lower face of the lever 446 when the shutter operating button 406 is at its extended position.
When the film advancing lever 446 is in the position shown in Figs 20 and 22, an edge 110 slot 278 in that lever is aligned with the end of the stop pin 277 so that the film advancing lever does not interfere with depression of the release button 406 Whenever the advancing lever 466 is moved away 115 from its initial position, however, the shutter operating button 406 cannot be depressed because of the abutment of the pin 277 with the lower face of that lever 446.
Similarly, as long as the shutter operating 120 button remains depressed, the pin 277 prevents the lever 446 from being moved out of its initial position Consequently, the film disc 10 cannot be rotated unless the shutter operating button 406 has first been 125 released to retract pressure platen 438 out of clamping engagement with the film cartridge assembly.
A blocking slide 279, shown in Fig 28 is slidably and rotatably mounted to the 130 1,597,073 lower face of the mechanism plate 443 by a rivet 281 extending through an elongate slot 282 in the slide 279 and is biased both rearwardly and in a clockwise direction by a spring 283 After the completion of each film advancing and shutter cocking operation, the slide 279 assumes the position shown in solid lines in Fig 28, in which an edge surface 284 of the slide 279 is in abutment with a stationary pin 285 and in which the ear 476 of the film advancing lever 446 is trapped behind a blocking tooth 286 of the slide 279 to prevent the lever 446 from being moved out of its initial position As previously explained, depression of the shutter operating button 406 causes the release slide 262 to move to the right to the position shown in broken lines, in Fig 28, to initiate the shutter operation This movement of the slide 262 causes its ear 287 to engage the rearward end of the blocking slide 279 and to rotate the latter in a counterclockwise direction about the rivet 281 in opposition to the spring 283, thereby moving the edge surface 284 out of engagement with the pin 285 Thereupon, the spring 283 moves the slide 279 rearwardly to the position shown in broken lines in Fig.
28, in which pin 285 is engaged with an edge 288 of the blocking slide to locate the tooth 286 beyond blocking engagement with ear 476 of the film advancing lever 446.
Accordingly, that lever 446 can again be operated to advance the film disc 10 and to recock the shutter As the filfim advancing lever 446 approaches the position shown in Fig 21 during this subsequent film advancing and shutter cocking operation, its ear 476 engages a tongue 289 of the slide 279 and moves the latter forwardly so that it can again assume the position shown in solid lines During the return movement of the lever 446 to its initial position, its ear 476 encounters the sloped face 291 of the blockin tooth 286 and momentarily cams the latter aside to allow the ear 476 to return to its blocked position This camming action momentarily displaces the blocking slide 279 slightly in a counterclockwise direction, but not far enough to disengage the edge surface 284 from the pin 285 Accordingly, as soon as the ear 476 has moved rearwardly beyond the blocking tooth 286, the blocking slide 279 reassumes the position shown in solid lines and prevents further reciprocation of the film advancing lever 446 until after the shutter has been operated again Thus, the blocking slide 279 ensures that each exposure area is exposed before the film disc 10 is again indexed to bring the next available exposure area 65 into exposure position.
The door latch mechanism, best shown in Fig 30, includes a latch slide 292 slidably mounted above the mechanism plate 443 on pins 466 and 293 anchored to that plate 443 and extending through respective slots 294 and 295 in the latch plate and a release slide 296 slidably mounted below the mechanism plate 443 by the opposite ends of the same pins 466 and 293 extending through slots 70 297 and 298 in the release slide An ear 299 projects upwardly through an opening 301 in the mechanism plate 443 and is adapted to engage the right edge 302 of a projection 303 on the latch slide 292 The release 75 slide 296 is biased toward the right by a spring 304 attached to a pin 305 on the mechanism plate 443 A stronger spring 306 connects the release slide 296 to a finger 307 of the latch slide 292 The finger 307 80 extends downwardly through the mechanism plate opening 301, and thereby resiliently biases the edge 302 of the slide 292 against the ear 299 of the slide 296 These two springs 304, 306 thus cooperate normally to 85 retain the two slides 292, 296 in their respective positions shown in Fig 30, with pins 466 and 293 engaging the left ends of the slots 294 and 295 in the latch slide 292 and passing through the centres of the slots 297 90 and 298 in the release slide 296 When the latch slide 292 is in this position, and assuming that the camera cover door 411 is closed, a latch tooth 308 of the latch slide 292 is engageable with a latch tooth 309 95 on the door 411 to retain the door 411 in its closed condition.
When the latch release slide 296 is moved to the left, by means of its externally accessible latch release button 413, the ear 299 100 of that slide moves the latch slide 292 in the same direction and thereby moves the latch slide tooth 308 out of engagement with the door's tooth 309 to permit the door 411 to be opened However, as best shown in 105 Fig 22 the sector plate 464 is located immediately above the latch slide 292 and obstructs such leftward movement of the ear 299 of the latch release slide 296 except when a notch 311 of the sector plate 464 110 is aligned with that ear 299, which occurs only when the driving disc 431 is in its initial position shown in Figs 19, 20 and 21.
As previously explained, the counterclockwise indexing movement imparted to 115 the film unit hub 12 by the advancing pawl 482 drives the sector plate 464 in a clockwise direction in opposition to the spring 468 and the engagement of the ratchet pawl 471 with the teeth of the ratchet tooth seg 120 ment 469 on the sector plate 464 prevents the latter from rotating in the opposite direction Consequently, whenever the film disc is rotated to an exposure position, the latch release button 413 cannot be moved 125 to the left to open the camera until the driving disc 431 has first been returned to its initial position to relocate the cover slide 14 over the exposure window 33 of the cartridge assembly casing The face of the sup 130 1,597,073 port frame 435 is so rounded as to facilitate sliding movement of the cover slide 14 into its position covering the exposure window 33.
To open the camera door after one or more film exposures have been made, the photographer first moves the button 413 to the right in opposition to spring 306, thereby causing the release slide ear 299 to engage a finger 312 on the ratchet pawl 471 and to withdraw the latter from engagement with the sector teeth 469 At its opposite end, the release slide 296 is provided with a finger 313 extending upwardly through a hole 314 in the mechanism plate 443 When the latch release slide 296 (Fig 30) is moved to the right to disengage, by its ear 299, the ratchet pawl 471 from the ratchet tooth segment 469, this finger 313 simultaneously engages and displaces the adjacent end of advancing pawl 482 (see Fig 20), thereby pivoting the latter in a counterclockwise direction about the stud 483, which simultaneously rotates the positioning pawl 4839 in a clockwise direction about the stud 491 because of the engagement of the advancing tooth end of the pawl 482 with the positioning pawl ear 495, best shown in Fig 26 Accordingly, the advancing tooth 487 and the positioning tooth 494 are both moved beyond the path of movement of the hub index ears 114 1 to allow the spring 468 to rotate the driving disk 431 back to its initial position, thus repcs=tioning the cover slide portion 14 over the film unit's exposure window 33 and allowing the latch release slide 296 now to be moved to its extreme left position to release the cover door 411.
If a malfunction were to prevent spring 468 from returning the film disc hub 12 to its initial position, for example because of jamming of a faulty cartridge assembly the interlock system just described would prevent the camera from being opened and would thereby make it impossible to correct the malfunction Therefore, provision is also made for allowing the cover door to be opened under extraordinary circumstances regardless of the orientation of the sector plate 464 This is accomplished by inserting a pin or similar tool through a hole 315 in the camera casing in alignment with an end face 316 of the latch slide 292 and thereby forcing the latch slide 292 to its unlatching position in opposition to spring 306.
Figs 31 through 33 illustrate, somewhat schematically, an even simpler form of a manually operated film disc indexing mechanism that can readily be incorporated with other features of the camera previously described and which likewise ensures that the camera cannot be opened until the rotatable cover slide 14 of the film cartridge assembly is returned to a position at which is closes the exposure window 33.
For use with this particular indexing mechanism, a film disc hub 351, shown in broken lines, is similar to the previously described film disc hub 12, but additionally includes a notch 352 loacted somewhat off 70 centre in the 90 degrees ear-free arc of the hub 351 While such a notch 352 would serve no purpose in cooperation with the previously described indexing mechanism, a hub with this feature is completely com 75 patible with that type of mechanism.
When the film cartridge assembly is installed in the camera, the central spindle hole 353 receives a stationary hub spindle 354 that also pivotally supports a film ad 80 vancing lever 355 This lever 355 carries a film advancing pawl 356, which is attached to the lever by a pin 357 and a spring 358 in the same manner previously described with reference to Figs 20-22 A position 85 ing pawl 359 is pivotally supported by an eccentric adjustment screw 361 and is biased in a counterclockwise direction toward a stop pin 362 by a weak spring 363 When the cartridge assembly is initially loaded into 90 the camera, the advancing tooth 364 of the film advancing pawl 356 is received in the notch 352 and the positioning tooth 365 of the pawl 359 is retained beyond engagement with the adjacent peripheral hub surface 366 95 by the pin 362 Flexible pawl springs 367 and 368 are adapted to engage the adjacent index ears 114 on the hub 351 to prevent the latter from rotating in a clockwise direction beyond a position at which the film advanc 100 ing pawl can engage the next index ear 114 during each film indexing operation.
As the film advancing lever 355 is rotated in a clockwise direction, the advancing tooth 364 of the pawl 356 rides over the first in 105 dex tooth 114 a and a cam surface 369 on the advancing pawl 356 engages a pin 371 on the positioning pawl 359 and raises the positioning tooth 365 to a position beyond the movement path of the hub's index ears 110 114 As shown in broken lines in Fig 31, the clockwise movement of the lever 355 is limited by a stop pin 372 so that the advancing pawl tooth 364 moves only far enough to ensure its engagment with the 115 hub index ear 114 a associated with the next available exposure area As the lever 355 is returned in a counterclockwise direction back to its initial position by a spring 373, the pawl tooth 364 advances the film disc 10 120 and brings the index ear 114 a into abutment with the positioning tooth 365, which has returned to its operative position during the final return movement of the lever 355 As shown in Fig 23, the index ear 114 a is thus 125 resiliently squeezed against the positioning tooth 365 by the advancing pawl tooth 364 in the same manner previously described By repeating this operation, the photographer can bring each successive exposure area 65 130 Is is 1,597,073 into exposure position Additionally, each film advancing movement of the lever 355 can also serve to cock the shutter and to perform other camera functions, as previously described.
After the last exposure area 65 has been brought to exposure position, the next reciprocative movement of lever 355 causes the advancing pawl tooth 364 to engage a face 374 of the hub notch 352 and thereby to rotate the hub through an angle sufficient to close the exposure window 33 with the cover slide 14 without quite completing a 360 degree rotation of the hub A cartridge assembly provided with such a notched hub is also modified by widening the upper notch in its dihedral locking boss so that the hub is locked against further rotation by its final indexing movement As best illustrated in Fig 33, because of the off-centre position of notch face 374 between index ears 114 a and 114 j, which results in the slightly less than 360 degree rotation of the hub 351, the index ear 114 a is now beyond the position at which it can be engaged by the advancing pawl tooth 364, which is shown in its extreme clockwise position in broken lines, thereby avoiding re-exposure of the first exposure area.
The door latching device is schematically represented in Fig 31 by a slidable latch member 375, which is movable to the left in opposition to a spring 376 by a slide button 377 to disengage a latch tooth 378 from a cooperating latch member carried by the camera door A pin 379 on the latch member 375 engages a cam surface 381 of a pivotally-mounted blocking member 382 and pivots the latter in a counterclockwise direction about its pivot pin 383 when the latch member is moved to the left to release the door A locking arm 384 is pivotally mounted by a stud 385 and includes a nose 386 urged into contact with the cam surface 369 of the film advancing pawl 356 by a spring 387.
When the advancing tooth 364 of the pawl 356 is received within the hub notch 352, the locking arm assumes the position shown in solid lines in Fig 31, in which its shoe 388 is positioned beyond the movement path of a finger 389 on the blocking member 382, thereby allowing the blocking member 382 to be rotated in a counterclockwise direction by the door releasing movement of the slidable latch member 375 When the hub 351 is in any other rotational position, however, the resulting forward displacement of the nose 386 causes the locking arm 384 to be rotated in a clockwise direction from its illustrated position, as shown in broken lines in Fig 31, whereby the shoe 388 blocks counterclockwise rotation of the blocking member 382 and thereby prevents the latch member 375 from being moved to the position at which the door is released Consequently, the door cannot be opened unless the hub 351 is at a position at which the cover slide closes the exposure window of the cartridge assembly casing.
Figures 34 to 37 schematically depict a 70 third camera mechanism, which may be called an "automatic film advance mechanism", because the energy required to accomplish all of the successive indexing movements of the film disc is imparted to the 75 mechanism during the operation of loading the camera.
As in the previously described embodiments of the invention, this camera mechamsm comprises a stationary hub support 80 spindle 4011, intended to be received in the central hole of the film disc hub, shown in broken lines at numeral 12 A driving disc 4021, similar to the previously described disc 431, is rotatably supported by the spindle 85 4011 and includes a pinion 4031 and a plurality of peripheral teeth 4041 spaced at 30 degree intervals to correspond to the spacing between adjacent index ears 114 of the hub 12 A drive sector 4051, in meshing en 90 gagement with the pinion 4031, is pivotally mounted on stud 4061 and is biased in a clockwise direction by a relatively strong hair pin spring 4071 When the sector 4051 is in the position shown in solid lines in 95 Fig 32, the driving disc 4021 is oriented with its coupling pin 4081 (equivalent to the previously described coupling pin 433) aligned between the spindle 4011 and the rectangular exposure opening 4091 of the 100 camera's film support frame structure, thereby allowing a film cartridge assembly to be installed in the camera in mating engagement with the driving disc 4021.
A lever 4111 is also pivotally mounted on 105 the stud 406 and includes an ear 4121 engageable with an edge 4131 of the drive sector 4051 To open the camera, the lever 4111 is rotated in a counterclockwise direction from the position shown in broken lines 110 in Fig 34 and in solid lines in Fig 37 to the position shown in solid lines in Fig 34, thereby causing the drive sector 4051 and the driving disc 4021 to assume the respective positions in which they are depicted in 115 solid lines in Fig 34.
A latch slide 4141, best illustrated in Figs.
36 and 37, is slidably mounted to the camera housing, not shown, by rivet pins 4151 and4161 extending through an L-shaped slot 417 '120 in the slide 4141 A spring 418 ' biases the slide 4141 both to the left and also in a clockwise direction about the pin 4161 The camera's cover door, partially depicted at numeral 4191, is shown in Fig 35 in its 125 closed position and in Fig 36 in a partially open position When the door 4191 is closed, the slide 4141 assumes the position shown in Fig 35 with the pins 4151 and 4161 both received in the horizontal leg 421 ' of the slot 130 17 1,597073 17 4171 and with slide tooth 422 ' in engagement with latch tooth 4231 on the cover door 419 ' to retain the latter in its closed condition.
As the lever 411 ' arrives at the position shown in solid lines in Fig 34, it engages a shoulder 424 ' of the latch slide 4141 and displaces the latter to the right in opposition to the spring 4181 to disengage the slide tooth 4221 from the latch tooth 4231 on the cover door 4191 Just before the teeth 422 ' and 4231 are disengaged from one another, however, vertical leg 4251 of the slot 417 ' moves into alignment with the pin 4151, whereupon the spring 4181 rotates the slide 4141 in a clockwise direction about the pin 4161 to move slide ear 4261 to a position to the left of the lever 411 ' After the photographer has completed the counterclockwise movement of the lever and has at least partially opened the door 4191, the ear 4261 retains the lever 4111 in the position shown in solid lines in Figs 34 and 36, thereby maintaining the sector 4051 in the position shown in Fig 34 as long as the cover door 4191 remains open When the cover door 4191 is subsequently pressed to a closed position, edge 4271 of the door 4191 engages the upper edge of the slide tooth 4221 and urges the latter downwardly so that the pin 4151 is again aligned with the horizontal leg 4211 of the slot 4171; whereupon the spring 4181 returns the slide 4141 to its latched position shown in Fig 35 and thereby releases the arm 4111, which is returned by spring 4281 to its position shown in solid lines in Figs 37 and in broken lines in Fig 34.
After the camera door 4191 has been closed, the lever 411 ' no longer opposes the clockwise rotation of the sector 4051 by the spring 4071 Accordingly, the sector 4051 now imparts counterclockwise rotation to the driving disc 4021 and thereby to the film disc hub 12 As the latter rotates in a counterclockwise direction, its index ear 114 a aligned with the film disc's first available exposure area 65, rotates into abutment with positioning tooth 4291 of pivotally supported positioning lever 4301 Accordingly, the rotatable cover slide 14 is removed from alignment with the exposure window 33 of the cartridge assembly casing and the first available exposure area is aligned with the exposure opening 4091 in the film support frame.
The shutter structure comprises an opening shutter blade 4311 and a closing shutter blade 432 ', which are located in superimposed relation to each other and supported for sliding movement by suitable support means, not shown The shutter blades 4311, 4321 are shown in Fig 34 in their respetive cocked positions, in which an aperture 4331 in the closing shutter blade 4321 is aligned with the exposure opening 409 ' and in which an aperture 4341 in the opening shutter blade 4311 is located to the right of the opening 4091 The engagement of the opening shutter blade pin 4351 with tooth 4361 of pivotally mounted latch lever 4371 retains the opening blade 4311 in its cocked 70 position in opposition to a spring 438 ' and the engagement of tooth 439 ' on the closing shutter blade with tooth 4411 of pivotally supported latch arm 4421 similarly retains the closing blade 4321 in its cocked posi 75 tion in opposition to a spring 4431.
A shutter release member 4441 is schematically depicted as being slidably supported by pins 4451 extending through an enlongate slot 4461 and is biased forwardly 80 to its inoperative position shown in Fig 34 by a spring 4471 attached to a pivotally supported lever 448 ' It should be understood that this representation of the shutter release member is merely illustrative, and that such 85 a member preferably would be located as illustrated in Fig 18 and connected with the shutter by appropriate linkage means.
As the shutter release member 4441 is moved rearwardly to effect an exposure, its 90 initial movement pivotally displaces the lever 4481 to move its finger 4491 out of supporting engagement with pressure plate ear 4511.
The finger 4491 and the ear 4511 correspond respectively to the finger 441 and the pres 95 sure plate ear 440 which were described previously with reference to Figs 18-30 This initial movement of the shutter release member 4441 causes the camera's pressure plate to squeeze the film against the film support 100 frame The continuing rearward movement of the member 4441 then brings its ear 452 ' into contact with the latch lever 4371 and pivots the latter in a clockwise direction about its pivot stud 4531 to the position 105 shown in solid lines in Fig 37 This movement of the lever 4371 disengages its tooth 436 ' from the pin 4351 on opening shutter blade 4311 and positions its teeth 4541 in alignment with pin 4551 on that same blade 110 4311 Accordingly, exposure of the film is initiated as the spring 4381 moves the opening shutter blade 431 ' to its intermediate position, shown in solid lines in Fig 37 in which the pin 4551 on that blade 4311 is en 115 gaged by the tooth 4541 of the latch lever 4371 and in which the opening blade aperture 4341 is aligned with the opening 4091 of the film support frame and with the aperture 4331 of the closing shutter blade 4321 120 As the opening shutter blade 4-31 ' arrives at its intermediate position, its lobe 4561 engages lobe 4571 on the latch arm 4421 and disengages the latch arm 4421 from tooth 4391 on the closing shutter blade 4321, there 125 by allowing the spring 443 ' to move the closing shutter blade 4321 to its intermediate position, defined by the abutment of its tab 4581 with the adjacent edge of the opening shutter blade 4311 This movement of 130 1,597,073 1,597,073 the closing shutter blade 432 ' terminates the film exposure by moving the closing shutter blade aperture 4331 beyond the film support frame opening 4091 Thus, the shutter mechanism provides a mechanically predetermined exposure interval, which obviously could be increased by the incorporation of an electromagnet for retarding the motion of the closing shutter blade 4321 in the same manner described in connection with Figs.
through 30.
As the shutter release member is returned to its initial position by the spring 4471, the lever 4481 causes the finger 4491 to retract the pressure plate from operative engagement with the film cartridge assembly, whereupon ear 4591 of the member 4441 engages the latch lever 4371 and returns it to its original position This movement of the latch lever 4371 disengages its tooth 4541 from the pin 455 ' of the opening shutter blade 4311 and thereby allows both shutter blades 4311, 4321 to move slightly further to the left to the position shown in broken lines in Fig.
37 During this final movement of the two shutter blades, edge 4611 of the blade 431 ' engages nose 462 ' of positioning lever 4301 and rotates the latter about its eccentric pivot pin 4631 to the position shown in broken lines in Fig 37, in which the positioning tooth 429 ' is disengaged from the hub index ear 114 a Consequently, the sector 4051 now drives the driving disc 4021 and the hub 12 in a counterclockwise direction, which causes the driving disc tooth 404 a' adjacent finger 4641 of cocking member 4651 to engage that finger and to displace the member 4651 in a clockwise direction about its pivot stud 4661.
A cocking arm 467 ' is also pivotally mounted to the stud 4661 below the cocking member 4651 and is biased in a counterclockwise direction against the stop pin 468 ' by spring 4691 A weak hairpin spring 4711 biases the cocking member 4651 in a clockwise direction relative to the cocking arm 4671 to urge edge 4721 of the cocking member 4651 against tab 4731 of the cocking arm 4671 As the tooth 404 a' of the driving disc 4021 engages and moves past the finger 4641 of the cocking member 4651, the resulting clockwise rotation of the cocking memher 4651 is imparted to the cocking arm 4671 through its tab 4731, thus causing the arm 4671 to move momentarily to the position shown in broken lines in Fig 34 and then to return to its initial position During this movement of the arm 4671, its head 4741 engages finger 4751 on the opening shutter blade 4311 and returns both blades 4311, 4321 to their initial cocked positions As the arm 4671 initially moves the shutter blades 431 ', 4321 back to their respective cocked conditions, the edge 461 ' of the opening shutter blade 4311 moves out of engagement with the nose 4621 of the positioning lever 4301 and allows spring 4761 to return the positioning lever 4301 to its operative position shown in Fig 34, whereby the rotation of the driving disc 4021 and the film hub is 70 again arrested when the next index tooth 114 b engages the positioning tooth 4291 Accordingly, the next available exposure area is now positioned for exposure and the shutter mechanism is recocked and restored to 75 its initial condition After the repetition of this operation has exposed all of the available film exposure areas, the sector 4051 moves into abutment with stop pin 4771, thus preventing further counterclockwise 80 rotation of the film disc.
Because the latch slide 4141 holds the loading lever 4111 in the position shown in solid lines in Fig 34 as long as the camera's cover door 4191 is open, the film disc in a 85 film cartridge assembly loaded into the camera cannot be rotated until the cover door has been closed, thereby preventing the film disc from being exposed inadvertently to ambient light If desired, this 90 feature could also be incorporated in the camera shown in Figs 18-30 by providing that camera with a simple latch device for locking the film advancing lever 446 in the position shown in Fig 20 whenever the 95 camera door is open.
To remove the film cartridge assembly, after either all or only some of the available exposure areas have been used, the photographer opens the camera door 419 '100 by moving the lever 411 to the position shown in solid lines in Fig.
34, thereby rotating the hub 12 in a clockwise direction back to its initial position in which the rotatable cover slide again closes 105 the exposure window of the cartridge assembly casing and in which the hub is now locked against further rotation During this clockwise rotation of the driving disc 4021, the film hub index ears 114 engage the 110 sloped face 4781 of positioning tooth 4291 and cam tooth 4291 aside in opposition to the spring 4761 The teeth 4041 of the driving disc 4021 similarly bypass the finger 4641 of the cocking member 4651 by rotating the 115 finger 4641 in a counterclockwise direction in opposition to the spring 4711 Although Fig.
34 shows the shutter in a cocked condition during the camera loading operation, this situation would exist only if the preceding 120 cartridge assembly were removed prior to exposure of all the available exposure areas.
If the preceding cartridge assembly had been fully exposed, the shutter would remain uncocked, but would be recocked by the initial 125 rotation of the driving disc 4021 by which the first available exposure area is brought into exposure position.
Fig 38 shows a modification of the mechanism depicted in Figs 34-37 for use in a 130 is 1,597,073 camera in which the shutter is cocked other than by the film advancing mechanism, for example, by the final return movement of the shutter release member after that movement has caused the pressure plate to disengage from the film cartridge assembly.
Because such a previously known shutter cocking mechanism, not shown, eliminates the need for the cocking arm 4671 and its associated structure, those elements are omitted and the positioning lever 4301 is provided with an escapement tooth 4811 to provide an escapement mechanism When the final movement of the shutter blades 4311, 4321 rotates the lever 4301 to the position shown in broken lines and thereby disengages the indexing tooth 4291 from a hub index ear, the escapement tooth 481 ' simultaneously moves into the movement path of the adjacent driving disc tooth 4041 Accordingly, the film disc is advanced only part way to the next exposure position before the tooth 4811 temporarily arrests further counterclockwise rotation of the driving disc 4021 When the shutter is recocked by the final return movement of the shutter releasing member, the spring 4761 returns the latch lever 4301 to its position shown in solid lines and withdraws its tooth 4811 from engagement with the driving disc tooth 4041; whereupon the film disc completes its indexing movement to the position established by the engagement of its next index ear with the positioning tooth 4291.
Figs 39 and 40 show another embodiment of an escapement mechanism functionally similar to the one shown in Fig 38 but in which both the positioning tooth 4831 and the escapement tooth 4841 cooperate directly with the hub index ears 114 to provide incremental indexing movements of the film disc hub 12 as it is biased in a counterclockwise direction by the driving disc 4851 The positioning tooth 4831 is carried by a positioning lever 4861, pivotally supported by eccentric pivot stud 4871, and is urged toward its operative position shown in Fig 39 by a spring 4881 In this position, which is defined by the abutment of the lever 486 ' against the pin 4891, the tooth 4831 is engaged with the hub index ear 114 a to arrest the counterclockwise rotation of the film disc hub and to locate the corresponding film exposure area in exposure position The escapement tooth 4841 is carried by an escapement lever 491 ', which is pivotally supported by pivot stud 4921 and provided with a cam face 4931 adjacent pin 4941 of the opening shutter blade 431 ' when the latter is in its intermediate position as shown in Fig.
39 An ear 4951 on the positioning lever 4861 engages finger 4961 of the escapement lever 4911 whereby the counterclockwise force supplied to the lever 4861 by the spring 4881 biases the lever 4911 in a clockwise direc 65 tion against pin 4971.
When the shutter blade 4311 moves to its final uncocked position, as shown in Fig.
40, its pin 4941 cams the escapement lever 4911 in a counterclockwise direction, where 70 by its finger 4961 moves the positioning lever 4861 in a clockwise direction in opposition to the spring 488 ' Accordingly, the positioning tooth 4831 is now released from the index ear 114 a, allowing the film disc hub 12 75 to rotate to the position shown in Fig 40, in which that index ear 114 a is engaged with the escapement tooth 4841 As the shutter is recocked, the spring 188 ' returns both levers 4861, 4911 to their respective posi 80 tions shown in Fig 39, thereby releasing the tooth 4841 from the ear 114 a and causing the tooth 4831 to intercept the index ear 114 b to complete the film disc indexing operation 85 Fig 41 illustrates the basic film unit 17 as it will appear to a handler after removal from the cartridge (under darkroom conditions) and processing It will be noted that the structural integrity of the film unit is 90 maintained i e the film disc 10 and the hub 12 are still secured together The photosensitive imaging surface 13 has been processed to provide a plurality e g 10 of photographic images corresponding to the image areas 65 95 which areas are surrounded by the now opaque preflashed borders In such a condition, the film unit, if a negative material, is ready for printing and if a positive material, is ready for viewing for example in 100 an apparatus diagrammatically shown in Figs 42 and 43.
Because of the retained structural integrity of the film unit, a printing apparatus or a viewing apparatus may again utilise the in 105 dexing ears 114 of the hub 12 to position the exposed and processed image areas 65 in alignment with an optical axis of the apparatus.
Figures 42 and 43 are illustrative of ap 110 paratus utilizing some of the advantages of the film unit described herein In Figure 42 a plurality of film units 17 bearing photographically developed images are arranged on a skewer 160 which is inserted through 115 the circular bores 116 of the film hubs 12 of the ifim units 17 A longitudinal spline on the skewer 160 interfits with keyways 117 in the bores 116 and serves to align the film units and prevent them rotating relative to 120 the skewer An optical viewer comprising a light source 158, an optical prism assembly 164 creating an optical path 163, and associated known optical and electrical components 161 including a cathode ray tube 125 162, is arranged to permit viewing on the cathode ray tube of the images in the image areas 65 of the film units 17 The aligned notches 54 of the film units 17 in effect forn A 1,9 1,597,073 a channel in the stack of film units which permits the prism assembly 164 to traverse parallel to the skewer 160 a distance sufficient to place the assembly 164 in alignment with a desired film unit ( 171) The skewer 160, together with the film units 17 mounted thereon, then need only be rotated through an arc calculated to align a desired one of the image areas 65 of the film unit 171 with the optical path 163 created by the prism assembly As mentioned above, this is most readily effected utilising the index ears 114 of the hub 12 The hubs 12 of the film units 17 afford a precise and uniform spacing between adjacent film discs 10 As seen in Figure 43, the prism assembly 164 may penetrate the stack of film discs 10 to engage a desired disc ( 171) without encountering interference from adjacent discs Although, as seen in Figure 43, the discs 10 on each side of the engaged disc 171 may be subjected to some slight flexing, the spacing provided by the hubs 12 is such that the flexed discs do not contact their adjacent discs.
The description and drawings of the present application are similar to the descriptions and drawings of our copending applications Nos 9038/78 (Serial No 1597071) and 9039178 (Serial No 1597072) and its divis onal application No 8007902 (Serial No 1597073), and a divisional application of the present application No 8007903 (Serial No 1597074).

Claims (1)

  1. WHAT WE CLAIM IS: -
    1 A photographic cartridge assembly including a casing having an exposure window, a film unit comprising a disc rotatable within the casing and having a plurality of image areas presentable at the exposure window, a hub member secured to the disc for rotation therewith, and releasable inhibitive means for restraining rotation of the film unit relative to the casing when the film unit is in an initial orientation therein.
    2 An assembly as claimed in Claim 1 wherein, upon release of the inhibitive means, the film unit is arranged for rotation and second inhibitive means are activatable upon completion of exposure of the image areas of the disc, to prevent further rotation.
    3 An assembly as claimed in Claim 1 or 2 wherein a cover slide is positioned within the casing so as to cover the exposure window when the film unit is in its initial orientation.
    4 An assembly as claimed in Claim 3 wherein the inhibitive means restrains rotation of the film unit and movement of the cover slide in the initial orientation of the film unit.
    An assembly as claimed in Claim 3 or 4 wherein the cover slide is secured to the film unit for rotation therewith.
    6 An assembly as claimed in any of Claims 1 to 5 wherein the inhibitive means comprises a flexible member and a cooperating rigid member, one of the members being located on the casing, the flexible member being deflectable from engagement with the 70 rigid member to release the inhibitive means.
    7 An assembly as claimed in Claim 6 wherein the flexible member is located on the casing in the region of a non-rotatable hub support, and the rigid member com 75 prises a stop surface on the hub member, the flexible member being deflectable from engagement with the stop surface to release the film unit for rotation relative to the casing 80 8 An assembly as claimed in Claim 6 wherein the inhibitive means comprises an abutment surface of the hub releasably engageable in use, by a non-rotatable element of the cartridge casing 85 9 An assembly as claimed in Claim 8 wherein the abutment surface comprises a surface of a H-shaped latch member arranged to receive, in the upper or lower bight of the H, the non-rotatable element 90 of the cartridge casing.
    An assembly as claimed in Claim 9 wherein the latch member comprises cam surfaces at each side of the lower or upper bight whereby, in use, the non-rotatable ele 95 ment of the cartridge casing can be positioned to ride into one of the bights on relative rotation of the film unit in either direction.
    11 An assembly as claimed in any pre 100 ceding claims wherein the inihibitive means is reactivatable upon removal of the assembly from a camera, for example, after exposure of the image areas of the film disc 105 12 An assembly as claimed in any preceding claims wherein the hub member is provided with indexing means and the inhibitive means are located on the opposite surface of the hub member to the indexing 110 means.
    13 An assembly as claimed in Claim 1 wherein the inhibitive means comprises first inhibitive means preventing rotation of the film unit in a first direction and second in 115 hibitive means preventing rotation of the film unit in a second opposite direction, one of the inhibitive means being releasable to permit rotation of the film unit in one of the directions 120 14 An assembly as claimed in Claim 13 wherein the inhibitive means, on completion of the exposure of the image areas of the film unit, prevent rotation thereof in either direction 125 An assembly as claimed in Claim 13 or 14 wherein the inhibitive means comprises rigid means on the casing or the film unit, and cooperating deflectable means on the film unit or the casing 130 1,597,
    073 16 A photographic cartridge assembly substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to and as illustrated in Figs 1 to 12 or Figs 1 to 12 as modified by Fig 13 and 14 of the accompanying drawings.
    17 A photographic still camera comprising a housing having a pocket wherein a cartridge assembly as claimed in any of Claims 1 to 16 is receivable, and a key engageable with the inhibitive means of the cartridge assembly to release the same and to permit movement of the film unit relative to the cartridge casing.
    18 A camera as claimed in Claim 17 wherein the key comprises a projection which, as the cartridge assembly is inserted into the camera, engages a flexible member of the inhibitive means to move the same from engagement with a cooperating rigid member thereof, one of the cooperating members being provided on the cartridge assembly casing.
    19 A camera as claimed in Claim 17 or 18 wherein the key is arranged to permit reengagement of the inhibitive means when the cartridge assembly is removed from the camera.
    A camera as claimed in Claim 19 wherein the key comprises an eccentric coupling pin of a camera drive means for rotating a film unit from or for resetting a film unit to an initial orientation thereof.
    21 A camera as claimed in any of Claims 17 to 20 wherein a cover door of the pocket is provided with latch means permitting access to the pocket and locking means are provided for preventing operation of the latch means except when the key is in its inhibitive means-engaging position whereby the latch means cannot be released until the film unit of a cartridge assembly received in the camera pocket is inhibited against rotation.
    22 A camera as claimed in Claims 20 and 21 wherein the locking means of the latch means is coupled to the drive means so as to be operable at all positions of the drive means save for a rest position corresponding to the initial orientation of a film unit in a cartridge assembly received therein.
    23 A camera as claimed in Claim 20 or any claim appendant thereto further including a resetting mechanism for resetting the drive means to its rest position prior to removal of a cartridge assembly from the camera.
    24 A photographic still camera substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to and as illustrated in Figs 18 to 30 or Figs 31 to 33 or Figs 34 to 37 or Figs.
    34 to 37 as modified by Fig 38 or Figs 39 and 40 of the accompanying drawings.
    L A TRANGMAR, B sc, CP A, Agent for the Applicants.
    Printed for Her Majesty's Stationery Office by Burgess & Son (Abingdon), Ltd -1981.
    Published at The Patent Office, 25 Southampton Buildings, London, WC 2 A l AY, from which copies may be obtained.
GB9040/78A 1977-03-07 1978-03-07 Photographic cartridge assembly and camera therefor Expired GB1597073A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US77471577A 1977-03-07 1977-03-07
US05/774,716 US4264169A (en) 1977-03-07 1977-03-07 Photographic film unit and cartridge assembly

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB1597073A true GB1597073A (en) 1981-09-03

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ID=27118941

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Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB9040/78A Expired GB1597073A (en) 1977-03-07 1978-03-07 Photographic cartridge assembly and camera therefor
GB9038/78A Expired GB1597071A (en) 1977-03-07 1978-03-07 Photographic cartridge assembly and camera therefor
GB9039/78A Expired GB1597072A (en) 1977-03-07 1978-03-07 Photographic camera and cartridge assembly therefor
GB7902/80A Expired GB1597074A (en) 1977-03-07 1978-03-07 Photographic cartridge assembly and camera therefor
GB7903/80A Expired GB1597075A (en) 1977-03-07 1978-03-07 Photographic film unit and cartridge assembly therefor

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GB9038/78A Expired GB1597071A (en) 1977-03-07 1978-03-07 Photographic cartridge assembly and camera therefor
GB9039/78A Expired GB1597072A (en) 1977-03-07 1978-03-07 Photographic camera and cartridge assembly therefor
GB7902/80A Expired GB1597074A (en) 1977-03-07 1978-03-07 Photographic cartridge assembly and camera therefor
GB7903/80A Expired GB1597075A (en) 1977-03-07 1978-03-07 Photographic film unit and cartridge assembly therefor

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JP (3) JPS5814667B2 (en)
AU (3) AU519561B2 (en)
BE (1) BE864655A (en)
BR (1) BR7801359A (en)
CH (1) CH625062A5 (en)
DE (4) DE2857343C2 (en)
FR (1) FR2383463A1 (en)
GB (5) GB1597073A (en)
HK (5) HK5282A (en)
IT (2) IT1093192B (en)
MY (5) MY8200248A (en)

Families Citing this family (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4194822A (en) * 1978-08-04 1980-03-25 Eastman Kodak Company Photographic film cartridge assembly and camera
US4290676A (en) * 1979-04-18 1981-09-22 Eastman Kodak Company Pressure member urging mechanism
US4309096A (en) 1979-12-26 1982-01-05 Eastman Kodak Company Film cartridge assembly with pressure plate
USRE31573E (en) * 1979-12-26 1984-05-01 Eastman Kodak Company Film cartridge assembly with pressure plate
DE3067217D1 (en) * 1979-12-26 1984-04-26 Eastman Kodak Co Film cartridge assembly with light sealing and pressure applying means
DE3049083C2 (en) * 1980-12-24 1985-03-14 Kodak Ag, 7000 Stuttgart Photographic cassette camera and cassette
DE3205424A1 (en) * 1982-02-16 1983-08-25 Kodak Ag, 7000 Stuttgart Photographic cassette camera having a control device for a cassette-side exposure-opening cover element
JPS58214123A (en) * 1982-06-08 1983-12-13 Hoya Corp Color film picture inverter
JPS58190636U (en) * 1982-06-14 1983-12-17 藤本写真工業株式会社 Print carrier device for disk film
JPS61109253A (en) * 1984-10-31 1986-05-27 Shimadzu Corp Electron beam microanalyzer

Family Cites Families (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1410029A (en) * 1918-06-26 1922-03-21 Niell Magnus Camera
US1563551A (en) * 1920-05-03 1925-12-01 Pictures Dev Co Disk-record apparatus
US2161341A (en) * 1938-01-19 1939-06-06 Eastman Kodak Co Locking device for cores in film magazines
US2531651A (en) * 1947-05-07 1950-11-28 American Safety Razor Corp Film cassette for cameras
US2531652A (en) * 1948-09-18 1950-11-28 American Safety Razor Corp Camera
US2625087A (en) * 1949-05-12 1953-01-13 Steineck Rudolf Construction for cameras
US2531653A (en) * 1949-06-30 1950-11-28 American Safety Razor Corp Film cassette for cameras
DE1185053B (en) * 1963-08-24 1965-01-07 Kodak Ag Film magazine
US3643571A (en) * 1968-12-19 1972-02-22 Polaroid Corp Photographic film assemblage
DE2214151A1 (en) * 1972-03-23 1973-09-27 Agfa Gevaert Ag CASSETTE FOR ROLLED FILM WITH PROTECTIVE PAPER

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
BE864655A (en) 1978-09-07
DE2809801A1 (en) 1978-09-14
JPS5616414B2 (en) 1981-04-16
FR2383463A1 (en) 1978-10-06
DE2809801B2 (en) 1981-04-09
MY8200247A (en) 1982-12-31
AU519642B2 (en) 1981-12-17
HK5482A (en) 1982-02-19
IT1093193B (en) 1985-07-19
HK5382A (en) 1982-02-19
GB1597075A (en) 1981-09-03
HK5282A (en) 1982-02-19
DE2809801C3 (en) 1982-03-04
HK5582A (en) 1982-02-19
IT7820966A0 (en) 1978-03-07
JPS55101942A (en) 1980-08-04
AU519561B2 (en) 1981-12-10
DE2809856A1 (en) 1978-09-14
BR7801359A (en) 1978-09-26
GB1597072A (en) 1981-09-03
IT7820969A0 (en) 1978-03-07
AU519562B2 (en) 1981-12-10
JPS53113525A (en) 1978-10-04
HK5182A (en) 1982-02-19
JPS55101940A (en) 1980-08-04
IT1093192B (en) 1985-07-19
MY8200248A (en) 1982-12-31
GB1597071A (en) 1981-09-03
DE2809780A1 (en) 1978-09-14
AU3389578A (en) 1979-09-13
MY8200250A (en) 1982-12-31
DE2809856B2 (en) 1981-07-16
GB1597074A (en) 1981-09-03
CH625062A5 (en) 1981-08-31
DE2857343C2 (en) 1983-07-07
DE2809780C3 (en) 1982-02-11
FR2383463B1 (en) 1985-02-08
AU3389678A (en) 1979-09-13
MY8200251A (en) 1982-12-31
DE2809780B2 (en) 1981-04-09
JPS5814667B2 (en) 1983-03-22
MY8200249A (en) 1982-12-31
AU3389478A (en) 1979-09-13

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Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PS Patent sealed [section 19, patents act 1949]
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19950307