Kamerastore Digital Database
120/220 manual focus medium format camera released by Pentax in 1999. The most advanced camera in the Pentax 6x7 line. The camera has an electronically controlled shutter enabling shutter speeds ranging from 4s to 1/1000s + B when in manual mode and 30 to 1/1000s when A-mode is in use. The Pentax 67 II features changeable finders that include the AE 67 II Pentaprism which makes it possible to use aperture-priority auto-exposure with the shutter speed dial in A-mode. Film sensitivity is visible on the top LCD and changeable manually from ISO 6 to 6400. Multi-exposure and mirror lock-up is possible by dedicated switches on the camera body. Flash synchronization at 1/30s. Has a self-timer with a 12s delay. Has center-weighted, 6-segment, and spot metering. Has +- 3 stops of exposure compensation. Plastic body available in black.
The Pentax 6x7 was introduced in 1969 as an alternative to modular SLRs on the market. The 6x7 instead emulates the handling of a 35mm SLR, just scaled up to fit the 6x7cm negative.
All generations of Pentax 6x7 cameras feature electronically-controlled focal plane shutters that can reach speeds up to 1/1000s. The one major downside of the design is the slow flash sync compared to the leaf shutters in Mamiya and Hasselblad lenses.
Pentax offered interchangeable finders for the 67 system including TTL prisms, waist level finders, chimney finders, and non-metered prisms. The 67 II is also capable of TTL aperture priority autoexposure with the right prism.
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