- Mamiya Six II (serial nº 9518) Lens: K.O.L. Special 3.5/75mm (serial nº 68168) (KOL= Kajiro optical laboratory) Shutter: NKS-Tokio Shutter (serial nº 28830) ( speeds T, B.
- Wide Omegon serial number 501xxx: 67 67 54 f/5.6 67 67 54 f/8 67 76 54 f/11 67 67 60 f/16 54 60 54 f/22 42 42 32 f/32: 58mm f/5.6: Hexanon serial number 721x7xx: 67 60 30 f/5.6 67 76 30 f/8 67 76 54 f/11 76 67 60 f/16 67 67 60 f/22: 90mm f/3.5: Hexanon serial number 37xx71: 60 60 19 f/3.5 67 76 24 f/4 76 67 24 f/5.6 85 95 33 f/8 85 95 38 f/11.
The Mamiya 6 was originally introduced in 1989. The camera should not be confused with the similarly named line of 'Mamiya Six' cameras from the 1940's & 50's. In 1993 Mamiya introduced a sucessor, the Mamiya 6MF (Multi-Format) which added frame lines for 645 format and 24x54mm format on 35mm film via an optional adapter. Some square aspect. Sep 16, 2019 Mamiya 6 Serial Numbers 9/16/2019 Dirk hr spennemann photography photographica Mamiya Six Design Variations ) NOTE the flash shoe is missing TEXT TEXT Serial Number to right of flash shoe Nameplate variations of the Mamiya Six. Near Mint New Mamiya 6 MF Medium Format Camera G 50mm F4 L Lens Japan 1127. Free shipping CLA'd MINT New Mamiya 6 Rangefinder Film Camera + G 50mm F/4 L Lens From JAPAN. Serial number 316117 Appearance Appperance is beautiful, tiny scuffs from normal use. It shows signs of use.Please check photos.
The Mamiya 6 is a medium-formatrangefinder system camera manufactured by Mamiya. It was introduced in 1989, and the line was discontinued in 1995. The coupled viewfinder windows displays frame lines appropriate to the lens mounted. The lens mount partially collapses when the camera is not in use, making it more compact. The camera has a built-in dark slide that allows the electronic leaf shutter lenses to be changed with film in the camera. It can operate in auto exposure, auto exposure lock, and manual modes. It captures twelve 6 cm × 6 cm images on 120 film rolls and 24 on 220 film. The camera also features a self-timer, hot shoe, and flash synchronization terminal.
The Mamiya 6 MF was introduced in 1993. It includes an adapter that allows 6×4.5 cm formatted images to be produced. However, the number of images per roll remains the same because images are horizontally oriented. An optional panoramic adapter allows 24×54 mm images to be captured on 35 mm film. The two new features added additional lines to the viewfinder.
Lenses[edit]
- Mamiya 50 mm f/4.0
- Lens construction: 8 elements in 5 groups
- Angle of view: 75˚
- Minimum aperture: 22
- 35mm equivalent: 28mm
- Minimum focusing distance: 1m
- Area covered: 94.5mm x 94.5mm
- Filter size: 58mm
- Hood: bayonet type
- Dimensions: 55mm (length) x 64mm (diameter)
- Weight: 335g
- Mamiya 75 mm f/3.5
- Lens construction: 6 elements in 4 groups
- Angle of view: 55˚
- Minimum aperture: 22
- 35mm equivalent: 41mm
- Minimum focusing distance: 1m
- Area covered: 63.2mm x 63.2mm
- Filter size: 58mm
- Hood: bayonet type
- Dimensions: 43mm (length) x 64mm (diameter)
- Weight: 250g
- Mamiya 150 mm f/4.5
- Lens construction: 6 elements in 5 groups
- Angle of view: 30˚
- Minimum aperture: 32
- 35mm equivalent: 82mm
- Minimum focusing distance: 1.8m
- Area covered: 56.2mm x 56.2mm
- Filter size: 67mm
- Hood: screw-in type
- Dimensions: 86mm (length) x 70mm (diameter)
- Weight: 480g
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- Mamiya 6 Instructions[permanent dead link] (404 - File or directory not found, 8 October 2017)
- Mamiya 6 MF Instructions (404 - File or directory not found, 8 October 2017)
External links[edit]
- Mamiya 6 page at Camera-wiki.org
This is a list of products made by Mamiya, including cameras and lenses. Models made by Mamiya but marketed under other labels are shown in parentheses.
Cameras[edit]
16 mm format[edit]
- Mamiya 16 (1949)
- Mamiya Super 16 (1953)
- Mamiya Super 16 II (1957)
- Mamiya Super 16 III (Tower 16) (1958)
- Mamiya 16 Automatic (Revue 16 Automatic) (1959)
- Mamiya 16 Deluxe (1961)
- Mamiya 16 EE Deluxe (1962)
126 format[edit]
- (Argus 260 Automatic) (1964)
- (Keystone K1020) (1966) — fixed-lens single lens reflex
35 mm format[edit]
Rangefinder[edit]
- Mamiya 35 I (1949)
- Mamiya 35 II (1955)
- Mamiya 35 III (1957)
- Mamiya Magazine 35 (1957)
- Mamiya Wide (1957)
- Mamiya Elca (1958)
- Mamiya Crown (1958)
- Mamiya Metra (1958)
- Mamiya S (1958)
- Mamiya Wide E (1959)
- Mamiya Auto Metra (1959)
- Mamiya Metra 2 (1959)
- Mamiya Auto Metra 2 (1959)
- Mamiya Sketch (1959) — square image format (24mm × 24mm)
- Mamiya S2 (1959)
- Mamiya Ruby (1959)
- Mamiya Auto Deluxe (1960)
- Mamiya Ruby Standard (1961)
- Mamiya M3 (1961)
- Mamiya EE Super Merit (Mamiya Vulcan, Honeywell Electric Eye 35R, Mansfield Eye-Tronic R) (1962)
- Mamiya 4B (Rank Mamiya) (1963)
- Mamiya Super Deluxe (1964)
- Mamiya Myrapid (1965) — half-frame
- Mamiya 135 (1977)
Single lens reflex[edit]
- Mamiya Prismflex (c. 1952) — prototype
- Mamiya Pentaflex (c. 1955) — prototype
- Mamiya Prismat (1960) — Exakta bayonet mount
- Mamiya Prismat NP (Sears 32A, Tower 32B, Sears 32B) (1961) — Exakta bayonet mount
- Mamiya Prismat PH (Tower 37, Tower 37A, PCA V-90) (1961) — Exakta bayonet mount
- Mamiya Prismat WP (1962) Argus Bayonet mount
- Mamiya Prismat WT (1962) Argus Bayonet mount
- (Nikkorex F, Ricoh Singlex, Nikkor J) (1962) — Nikon F-mount
- Mamiya Prismat CPH (1963) — Exakta bayonet mount
- Mamiya Prismat CWP (Mamiya Prismat CP) (1964) — Exakta bayonet mount
- Mamiya/Sekor 500TL (1966) — M42 lens mount
- Mamiya/Sekor 1000TL (1966) — M42 lens mount
- Mamiya/Sekor 500DTL (1968) — M42 lens mount
- Mamiya/Sekor 1000DTL (1968) — M42 lens mount
- Mamiya/Sekor 2000DTL (1969) — M42 lens mount
- Mamiya/Sekor AutoXTL (1972) — Mamiya XTL bayonet mount
- Mamiya X-1000 (1974) — Mamiya XTL bayonet mount
- Mamiya MSX 500 (1974) — M42 lens mount
- Mamiya MSX 1000 (1975) — M42 lens mount
- Mamiya DSX 500 (1975) — M42 lens mount
- Mamiya DSX 1000 B (1975) — M42 lens mount
- Mamiya NC-1000 (1978) — Mamiya NC bayonet mount
- Mamiya NC-1000s (1978) — Mamiya NC bayonet mount
- Mamiya ZE (1980) — Mamiya Z bayonet mount
- Mamiya ZE-2 (1980) — Mamiya Z bayonet mount
- Mamiya ZE-X (1981) — Mamiya Z bayonet mount
- Mamiya ZM (1982) — Mamiya Z bayonet mount
- Mamiya ZF (c. 1983) — prototype
Fixed-lens SLR[edit]
- Mamiya Auto-Lux 35 (1961)
- Mamiya Prismat Family (1962)
- Mamiya Prismat 528TL (1967)
- Mamiya Prismat 528AL (1975)
Viewfinder[edit]
- Mamiya Mammy (1953) — zone focus system
- Mamiya Speed Shot Special (a.k.a. Mamiya Pistol Camera) (c. 1954) — half-frame; rare police model; not sold to public
- Mamiya Automatic 35 EEF (Tower 39, Tower 41) (1961) — zone focus system
- Mamiya EE Merit (Honeywell Electric Eye) (1962) — zone focus system
- Mamiya 135 EF (1979) — zone focus system
- Mamiya 135 AF (1980) — auto-focus
- Mamiya U (1981) — zone focus system
- Mamiya 135 EF2 (1982) — zone focus system
- Mamiya M (1982) — auto-focus
- Mamiya U Auto Focus (1983) — auto-focus
- Mamiya M Time Memory (1983) — auto-focus
6×4.5 cm format[edit]
For details, see Mamiya 645.

Mamiya 645 manual focus series[edit]
Mamiya 6 Serial Numbers For Sale
- The M645 (discontinued) was manufactured from 1975 to 1987 — the first model and the launch of the Mamiya 645 system
- The M645 1000S (discontinued) was manufactured from 1976 to 1990 — added a 1/1000 second shutter speed, self-timer and a depth-of-field preview lever
- The M645J (discontinued) was manufactured from 1979 to 1982 — a stripped down version of the M645
- The Mamiya 645 Super (discontinued) was manufactured from 1985 to 1993 — a new camera design with removable film backs
- The Mamiya 645 Pro (discontinued) was manufactured from 1993 to 1998 — minor updates to the Mamiya 645 Super
- The Mamiya 645 Pro-TL (discontinued) was first released in 1997 — minor updates to the Mamiya 645 Pro
- The Mamiya 645E (discontinued) was first released in 2000 — entry-level model with a non-interchangeable back and finder
Mamiya 645 auto focus series[edit]
- Mamiya 645AF (1999) — the first autofocus model
- Mamiya 645AFD (2001) — added communication interface for digital backs
- Mamiya 645AFD II (2005) — minor updates to the 645AFD
- Mamiya 645AFD III (Phase One 645AF) (2008) — minor updates to the 645AFD II
- Mamiya 645DF (Phase One 645DF) (2009) — digital-only (no film backs)
- Mamiya 645DF+ (Phase One 645DF+) (2012-current) — digital-only (no film backs)
Mamiya ZD series[edit]
- Mamiya ZD (2004) — fixed-back medium-format DSLR
6×6 cm format[edit]
Twin-lens reflex[edit]
- Mamiyaflex Junior (1948)
- Mamiyaflex Automat A (1949)
- Mamiyaflex I (1951)
- Mamiyaflex II (1952)
- Mamiyaflex Automat B (1954)
- Mamiyaflex Automat A II (1955)
- Mamiyaflex Automat B II (1956)
- Mamiyaflex Automat A III (1956)
- Mamiyaflex C Professional (1956)
- Mamiyaflex PF (1957) police model
- Mamiyaflex C2 Professional (1958)
- Mamiya C3 Professional (1962)
- Mamiya C33 Professional (1965)
- Mamiya C22 Professional (1966)
- Mamiya C220 Professional (1968)
- Mamiya C330 Professional (1969)
- Mamiya C330f Professional (1975)
- Mamiya C220f Professional (1982)
- Mamiya C330s Professional (1983)
Rangefinder[edit]
- Mamiya Six I (1940)
- Mamiya Six I A (1941)
- Mamiya Six III (1942)
- Mamiya Six II (1943)
- Mamiya Six II A (1943)
- Mamiya-6 IV (1947)
- Mamiya-6 V (1953)
- Mamiya-6 K (1954)
- Mamiya-6 IV B (1955)
- Mamiya-6 Automat (1955)
- Mamiya-6 K II (1956)
- Mamiya-6 IV S (1957)
- Mamiya-6 P (1957)
- Mamiya-6 Automat 2 (1958)
- Mamiya 6 (1989) — electronic 6 cm × 6 rangefinder camera
- Mamiya 6 MF (1993) — added multi-format back feature
6×7 cm format[edit]
- Mamiya RB67 Professional (1970) — mechanical 6 cm × 7 cm SLR medium-format camera
- Mamiya RB67 Professional S (1974) — minor changes
- Mamiya RB67 Professional GL (1982) — special edition of the Pro-S
- Mamiya RB67 Professional SD (1990) — new, larger lens throat; older lenses require an adapter
- Mamiya RZ67 Professional (1982) — electronic 6 cm × 7 cm SLR medium-format camera
- Mamiya RZ67 Professional II (1995) — upgraded electronics
- Mamiya RZ67 Professional IID (2004-2014) — added communication interface for digital backs
- Mamiya 7 (1995–1999) — electronic 6 cm × 7 cm rangefinder camera
- Mamiya 7 II (1999-2011) — added multi-exposure capability and other minor improvements
6x9 cm format[edit]
- Mamiya Press (1960)
- Mamiya Press G (1963)
- Mamiya Press S (1964)
- Mamiya Press Standard (1965)
- Mamiya Press Super 23 (1967)
- Mamiya Universal Press (1969)
- (Polaroid 600/600SE) — similar to the Mamiya Universal, but with different lens and back mounts (note: not part of the 600 series consumer line)
Lenses[edit]
Mamiya 645 lenses and accessories[edit]
- See the Mamiya 645 system article for a complete list of lenses and accessories
Mamiya RB lenses[edit]
Mamiya RB lenses come in original (single-coated), C (multi-coated), K/L (newer design multi-coated), L (newer design multi-coated, Pro-SD body only), and APO/L (low-dispersion glass, Pro-SD body only) versions.
- Mamiya 37 mm f/4.5 C Fisheye
- Mamiya 50 mm f/4.5
- Mamiya 50 mm f/4.5 C (current)
- Mamiya 65 mm f/4.5
- Mamiya 65 mm f/4.5 C
- Mamiya 65 mm f/4.0 K/L (current)
- Mamiya 75 mm f/4.5 K/L (current)
- Mamiya 75 mm f/3.5 S/L Shift
- Mamiya 90 mm f/3.8
- Mamiya 90 mm f/3.8 C
- Mamiya 90 mm f/3.5 K/L (current)
- Mamiya 127 mm f/3.8
- Mamiya 127 mm f/3.8 C
- Mamiya 127 mm f/3.5 K/L (current)
- Mamiya 140 mm f/4.6 C Macro (current)
- Mamiya 150 mm f/4.0 C Variable Soft Focus (current)
- Mamiya 150 mm f/3.5 K/L
- Mamiya 180 mm f/4.5
- Mamiya 180 mm f/4.5 C
- Mamiya 180 mm f/4.5 K/L (current)
- Mamiya 210 mm f/4.5 APO/L (current)
- Mamiya 250 mm f/4.5
- Mamiya 250 mm f/4.5 C
- Mamiya 250 mm f/4.5 K/L (current)
- Mamiya 250 mm f/4.5 APO/L (current)
- Mamiya 350 mm f/5.6 APO/L (current)
- Mamiya 360 mm f/6.3
- Mamiya 360 mm f/6.3 C
- Mamiya 360 mm f/6.3 K/L
- Mamiya 500 mm f/8.0 C
- Mamiya 500 mm f/6.0 APO/L
- Mamiya 100–200 mm f/5.2 C Zoom (current)
- Mamiya No. 1 extension tube (45mm) (Pro/Pro-s and Pro-SD versions)
- Mamiya No. 2 extension tube (82mm) (Pro/Pro-s and Pro-SD versions)
Mamiya RZ lenses[edit]
Mamiya RZ lenses feature Seiko #1 electronic shutters.
- Mamiya 37 mm f/4.5 Fisheye (current)
- Mamiya 50 mm f/4.5
- Mamiya 50 mm f/4.5 ULD L (current)
- Mamiya 65 mm f/4.0
- Mamiya 65 mm f/4.0 L-A(current)
- Mamiya 75 mm f/3.5 L
- Mamiya 75 mm f/4.5 L Short Barrel
- Mamiya 75 mm f/4.5 Shift (current)
- Mamiya 90 mm f/3.5 (current)
- Mamiya 110 mm f/2.8
- Mamiya 110 mm f/2.8 W (current)
- Mamiya 127 mm f/3.8
- Mamiya 127 mm f/3.5
- Mamiya 140 mm f/4.5 Macro
- Mamiya 140 mm f/4.5 L-A Macro (current)
- Mamiya 150 mm f/3.5 (current)
- Mamiya 180 mm f/4.0 D/L Variable Soft Focus (current)
- Mamiya 180 mm f/4.5 Short Barrel (current)
- Mamiya 180 mm f/4.5 W-N (current)
- Mamiya 210 mm f/4.5 APO (current)
- Mamiya 250 mm f/4.5 (current)
- Mamiya 250 mm f/4.5 APO (current)
- Mamiya 350 mm f/5.6 APO (current)
- Mamiya 360 mm f/6.0
- Mamiya 500 mm f/8.0
- Mamiya 500 mm f/6.0 APO
- Mamiya 100–200 mm f/5.2 Zoom (current)
Mamiya 6 lenses[edit]
- Mamiya 50 mm f/4
- Mamiya 75 mm f/3.5
- Mamiya 150 mm f/4.5
Mamiya 7 lenses[edit]

- Mamiya 43 mm f/4.5 (current)
- Mamiya 50 mm f/4.5 (current)
- Mamiya 65 mm f/4.0 (current)
- Mamiya 80 mm f/4.0 (current)
- Mamiya 150 mm f/4.5 (current)
- Mamiya 210 mm f/8.0 (current)
Mamiya-Sekor E and EF lenses[edit]
- Mamiya-Sekor E 1:2.8 f=28mm
- Mamiya-Sekor E 1:3.5 f=28mm
- Mamiya-Sekor E 1:2.8 f=35mm
- Mamiya-Sekor E 1:1.4 f=50mm
- Mamiya-Sekor E 1:1.7 f=50mm
- Mamiya-Sekor E 1:2 f=50mm
- Mamiya-Sekor E 1:3.5 f=50mm Macro
- Mamiya-Sekor E 1:2.8 f=135mm
- Mamiya-Sekor E 1:3.5 f=135mm
- Mamiya-Sekor E 1:4 f=200mm
- Mamiya-Sekor E 1:4 f=300mm
- Mamiya-Sekor Zoom E 1:3.5-4.5 f=28-50mm
- Mamiya-Sekor Zoom E 1:3.5-4.5 f=35-70mm
- Mamiya-Sekor Zoom E 1:3.5-4.3 f=35-105mm
- Mamiya-Sekor Zoom E 1:3.8 f=70-150mm
- Mamiya-Sekor Zoom E 1:3.8 f=80-200mm
- Mamiya-Sekor Zoom E 1:4 f=80-200mm
- Mamiya-Sekor EF 1:2.8 f=35mm
- Mamiya-Sekor EF 1:1.4 f=50mm
- Mamiya-Sekor EF 1:1.7 f=50mm
- Mamiya-Sekor E 1:2.8 f=135mm
Auto Mamiya-Sekor CS lenses[edit]
M42 list from [1] (lenses 3.5/14mm until 3.5/45-90mm) and own collection (lens 3.8/80-200mm)
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor CS 1:3.5 f=14mm Fisheye
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor CS 1:2.8 f=21mm
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor CS 1:2.8 f=28mm
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor CS 1:2.8 f=35mm
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor CS 1:1.4 f=50mm
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor CS 1:1.7 f=50mm
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor CS 1:2 f=50mm
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor CS 1:3.5 f=50mm Macro
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor CS 1:2.8 f=135mm
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor CS 1:3.5 f=200mm
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor CS 1:4 f=300mm
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor Zoom CS 1:3.5 f=45-90mm
- Auto Mamiya-Sekor Zoom CS 1:3.8 f=80-200mm
Mamiya/Sekor M42 lenses[edit]
M42 list from [2]
- AUTO mamiya/sekor 1:2.8 f=28 mm
- AUTO mamiya/sekor 1:2.8 f=28 mm
- AUTO mamiya/sekor 1:2.8 f=28 mm
- AUTO mamiya/sekor 1:2 f=50 mm Model I (DTL Series)
- AUTO mamiya/sekor 1:2 f=50 mm Model II (DTL Series)
- AUTO mamiya/sekor 1:2.8 f=50 mm
- AUTO mamiya/sekor 55 mm 1:1.4
- AUTO mamiya/sekor 1:1.8 f=55 mm
- mamiya-sekor 1:1.7 f=58 mm
- mamiya macro sekor 1:2.8 f=60 mm
- AUTO mamiya/sekor 1:2.8 f=135 mm (TL Series)
- AUTO mamiya/sekor 1:2.8 f=135 mm (DTL Series)
- AUTO mamiya/sekor 1:3.5 f=200 mm Model III
- mamiya/sekor 1:6.3 f=400 mm
The mamiya/sekor 55mm 1:1.4 is known to have radioactive thorium glass elements.
Accessories[edit]
Flash units[edit]
Mamiya 6 Serial Numbers List
- Mamiyalite ZE
- Mamiyalite MZ 36R
- Mamiya Auto 480 Model 2
Digital camera backs[edit]
- Mamiya ZD Back — compatible with 645AFDII, 645AFDIII and through HX701 adapter RZ67 Pro IID
- Mamiya DM22 — bundled with a 645DF
- Mamiya DM28 — bundled with a 645DF
- Mamiya DM33 — bundled with a 645DF
Gallery[edit]
Mamiya M645 1000S
Mamiya C33 focus chart
Mamiya C220
Mamiya C330 with lenses removed
Mamiya RB67 120 film back
animation of Mamiya RZ67 focusing
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mamiya cameras. |
Further reading[edit]
- Mamiya Camera Museum - in Japanese
References[edit]
- ^Mamiya NC1000s Bedienungsanleitung (user manual)
- ^The Unofficial Homepage for Mamiya NC Series Cameras / Various Interesting M42 Screw Mount Lenses
External links[edit]
- R.Herron's Collecting Mamiya 35 mm (Collector site for Mamiya 35mm)