Olympus OM-1

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Olympus OM-1
Olympus OM-1.jpg
OM-1MD with 50 mm f/1.8 lens
Overview
Maker Olympus
Type SLR
Released1972 M-1; 1973 OM-1; 1974 OM-1MD; 1979 OM-1n.
Production1972-1988
Lens
Lens mount Olympus OM mount
Sensor/medium
Recording medium 135 film
Focusing
FocusManual focus
Exposure/metering
Exposure Manual
Flash
Flash Hot shoe
Shutter
Frame rate manually wound
Shutter speed range1 s – 1/1000 s; Bulb
General
Dimensions 136 × 83 × 50 mm
Weight 490 g (17 oz) (OM-1); 510 g (18 oz) (OM-1n)
Made in Japan
Chronology
Successor Olympus OM-2
Footnotes
[1] [2]

The Olympus OM-1 is a manually operated 35mm single-lens reflex camera. It is part of the Olympus OM system.

Contents

History

The first model was presented at photokina in Cologne in 1972 and was called the Olympus M-1. Thirteen years earlier, the release of the Nikon F had made the 35 mm SLR the standard choice for professionals accustomed to Leica and other rangefinders, but it had driven the market towards heavy and bulky cameras. The Olympus M-1 changed this and with it began a reduction of size, weight and noise of the 35 mm SLRs. It was designed by a team led by Yoshihisa Maitani, who had already created the Pen and Pen F cameras, noted for their compactness.

Olympus OM-1n with 50mm / f1.8 lens Olympus om1 jm2.jpg
Olympus OM-1n with 50mm / f1.8 lens

Since Leica's flagship rangefinder cameras are known as the M Series, Leica complained about the name of the M-1, forcing Olympus to rename it as the OM-1 to further clarify between the brands. Because of this, today bodies and lenses with the original M name are rare (52000 bodies were made according to Olympus) and sought after by collectors.

The OM-1 is an all-mechanical SLR. It has a large viewfinder with interchangeable screens but a fixed prism. It also has a through-the-lens exposure meter controlling a needle visible in the viewfinder. It has a compact body, essentially retained on later models. The shutter speed dial is located around the lens mount, which allows photographers to keep the camera at the eye between shots more easily than SLRs with the dial located on the top plate.

Originally, the bottom plate needed to be modified to mount a motor drive on the OM-1. In 1974, Olympus launched the OM-1MD (MD standing for Motor Drive), to which a motor drive can be attached without need for modification. This new version has a small plate marked 'MD' on the front, and a small slot with a circular cover on the underside that covers the motor drive coupling.

In 1979, the next iteration was the OM-1n. It was similar to the OM-1MD, with a redesigned film advance lever, a flash ready/sufficient flash LED in the viewfinder, and automatic flash synchronization (X-sync), regardless of the position of the FP/X switch when used with a T-series flash unit mounted on Flash Shoe 4.

Professional photographers who used the OM-1 include Patrick Lichfield, Jane Bown, David Bailey, Josef Koudelka, Chris Bonington, and Kate Garner. [3]

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References

  1. "Olympus OM-1". Guide to Classic Cameras. mediajoy. Retrieved 3 March 2012.
  2. Ting, Ed (23 June 2008). "Olympus OM1 and OM2 Overview" . Retrieved 3 March 2012.
  3. "OMgraphers". Maitani Fan. 2006. Retrieved 20 August 2020.

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This article was originally based on "Olympus_OM-1/2/3/4" in Camerapedia, retrieved on 26 May 2006 under the GNU Free Documentation License.