Mittlerer Teil von Vietnam 5 Buchstaben

In China, however, the name "PHOENIX" was not so restricted, and a company was created to make Phoenix SLR cameras -- with the Minolta DFB lens mount.  The Phoenix cameras, if not the lenses, were made by Seagull -- and all are similar to certain Seagull models. Phoenix P-2000 The P-2000 is a modified version of the Minolta X-370n.  Most noticeable, it is strictly a metered-manual exposure only camera.  It has a built-in TTL meter, but it lacks the auto-exposure of the X-370n.  It has three LED's in the viewfinder which indicate the correct exposure as you manually change the shutter speed and the aperture. The viewfinder has a split-image rangefinder with a micro-prism collar, and displays LEDs on the right-hand side of the viewfinder -- a RED LED on the top for "over-exposure", a GREEN LED in the middle for "correct exposure", and a YELLOW LED on the bottom for "under-exposure" -- when the plain (non-sensa-switch) shutter release is pressed half-way.  It has an ON/OFF switch -- and no LEDs lighting up in the viewfinder is the battery check.  The shutter is an electronic, quartz-controlled, horizontal-traverse cloth curtain, using two A76 batteries.  It uses a silicon, center-weighted meter cell, has a self-timer, a non-dedicated hot shoe, and film speeds from 12-3200. So it is a very capable shooter, and although it will not accept a motor drive, it does add two interesting features.  First, it has expanded shutter speeds (1-1/1,000, plus B & T), and it adds multiple-exposure capability.  There is a small lever in front of the film advance lever.  Simply hold this in with your index finger as you cock the shutter with your thumb. It is often seen with a Phoenix 28-80 f3.5/5.6 zoom lens.  It is the same cameras as the Seagull DF-2000A except it has a black body -- instead of champagne colored. The Phoenix P-2000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

It is often seen with a Phoenix 28-80 f3.5/5.6 zoom lens.  It is the same cameras as the Seagull DF-2000A except it has a black body -- instead of champagne colored. The Phoenix P-2000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Weiches Sedimentgestein kreuzw

Die Vermittlungscodes sind per se unbegrenzt gültig. Nach Eingabe des Codes (Aktivierung) im 116117 Terminservice, in Kombination mit einer erfolglosen Terminsuche, verliert der Code nach 7 Tagen seine Gültigkeit. Wird ein gebuchter Termin über den 116117 Terminservice abgesagt, behält dieser für den Termin verwendete Code seine unbegrenzte Gültigkeit. Führen die Patient:innen eine zweimalige Terminabsage für einen Code durch, verliert dieser seine Gültigkeit.

Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

... filter cubes. Add to Cart. +. ZET488TopNotch™ - High Performance Narrow Band 488nm Laser Notch Filter. EM, 488nm, -, $825.00. Add to Cart. Show ...

The Phoenix P-2000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Zacke an Gabeln, Kämmen

It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

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It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

A1 Glass & More - A1 Glass & More is a Glass and Window Company in North Little Rock, AR.

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Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

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It is often seen with a Phoenix 28-80 f3.5/5.6 zoom lens.  It is the same cameras as the Seagull DF-2000A except it has a black body -- instead of champagne colored. The Phoenix P-2000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

The first SLR camera with the "Phoenix" name was not made in China.  It was made in Japan in 1954 by the Orion Camera Company -- which wanted to use the "Phoenix" name, but discovered that it was already "taken". It was only a prototype, and when they discovered that the "Phoenix" name was already trade-marked, they decided to name their camera "Miranda" instead -- the "MIR" signifying the reflex mirror. In China, however, the name "PHOENIX" was not so restricted, and a company was created to make Phoenix SLR cameras -- with the Minolta DFB lens mount.  The Phoenix cameras, if not the lenses, were made by Seagull -- and all are similar to certain Seagull models. Phoenix P-2000 The P-2000 is a modified version of the Minolta X-370n.  Most noticeable, it is strictly a metered-manual exposure only camera.  It has a built-in TTL meter, but it lacks the auto-exposure of the X-370n.  It has three LED's in the viewfinder which indicate the correct exposure as you manually change the shutter speed and the aperture. The viewfinder has a split-image rangefinder with a micro-prism collar, and displays LEDs on the right-hand side of the viewfinder -- a RED LED on the top for "over-exposure", a GREEN LED in the middle for "correct exposure", and a YELLOW LED on the bottom for "under-exposure" -- when the plain (non-sensa-switch) shutter release is pressed half-way.  It has an ON/OFF switch -- and no LEDs lighting up in the viewfinder is the battery check.  The shutter is an electronic, quartz-controlled, horizontal-traverse cloth curtain, using two A76 batteries.  It uses a silicon, center-weighted meter cell, has a self-timer, a non-dedicated hot shoe, and film speeds from 12-3200. So it is a very capable shooter, and although it will not accept a motor drive, it does add two interesting features.  First, it has expanded shutter speeds (1-1/1,000, plus B & T), and it adds multiple-exposure capability.  There is a small lever in front of the film advance lever.  Simply hold this in with your index finger as you cock the shutter with your thumb. It is often seen with a Phoenix 28-80 f3.5/5.6 zoom lens.  It is the same cameras as the Seagull DF-2000A except it has a black body -- instead of champagne colored. The Phoenix P-2000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Image

It was only a prototype, and when they discovered that the "Phoenix" name was already trade-marked, they decided to name their camera "Miranda" instead -- the "MIR" signifying the reflex mirror. In China, however, the name "PHOENIX" was not so restricted, and a company was created to make Phoenix SLR cameras -- with the Minolta DFB lens mount.  The Phoenix cameras, if not the lenses, were made by Seagull -- and all are similar to certain Seagull models. Phoenix P-2000 The P-2000 is a modified version of the Minolta X-370n.  Most noticeable, it is strictly a metered-manual exposure only camera.  It has a built-in TTL meter, but it lacks the auto-exposure of the X-370n.  It has three LED's in the viewfinder which indicate the correct exposure as you manually change the shutter speed and the aperture. The viewfinder has a split-image rangefinder with a micro-prism collar, and displays LEDs on the right-hand side of the viewfinder -- a RED LED on the top for "over-exposure", a GREEN LED in the middle for "correct exposure", and a YELLOW LED on the bottom for "under-exposure" -- when the plain (non-sensa-switch) shutter release is pressed half-way.  It has an ON/OFF switch -- and no LEDs lighting up in the viewfinder is the battery check.  The shutter is an electronic, quartz-controlled, horizontal-traverse cloth curtain, using two A76 batteries.  It uses a silicon, center-weighted meter cell, has a self-timer, a non-dedicated hot shoe, and film speeds from 12-3200. So it is a very capable shooter, and although it will not accept a motor drive, it does add two interesting features.  First, it has expanded shutter speeds (1-1/1,000, plus B & T), and it adds multiple-exposure capability.  There is a small lever in front of the film advance lever.  Simply hold this in with your index finger as you cock the shutter with your thumb. It is often seen with a Phoenix 28-80 f3.5/5.6 zoom lens.  It is the same cameras as the Seagull DF-2000A except it has a black body -- instead of champagne colored. The Phoenix P-2000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Informieren Sie sich über alle wichtigen Änderungen und Entwicklungen rund um die vertragsärztliche Tätigkeit und den Praxisalltag: Von der Abrechnung über neue digitale Anwendungen bis hin zur Qualitätssicherung.

For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

It was only a prototype, and when they discovered that the "Phoenix" name was already trade-marked, they decided to name their camera "Miranda" instead -- the "MIR" signifying the reflex mirror. In China, however, the name "PHOENIX" was not so restricted, and a company was created to make Phoenix SLR cameras -- with the Minolta DFB lens mount.  The Phoenix cameras, if not the lenses, were made by Seagull -- and all are similar to certain Seagull models. Phoenix P-2000 The P-2000 is a modified version of the Minolta X-370n.  Most noticeable, it is strictly a metered-manual exposure only camera.  It has a built-in TTL meter, but it lacks the auto-exposure of the X-370n.  It has three LED's in the viewfinder which indicate the correct exposure as you manually change the shutter speed and the aperture. The viewfinder has a split-image rangefinder with a micro-prism collar, and displays LEDs on the right-hand side of the viewfinder -- a RED LED on the top for "over-exposure", a GREEN LED in the middle for "correct exposure", and a YELLOW LED on the bottom for "under-exposure" -- when the plain (non-sensa-switch) shutter release is pressed half-way.  It has an ON/OFF switch -- and no LEDs lighting up in the viewfinder is the battery check.  The shutter is an electronic, quartz-controlled, horizontal-traverse cloth curtain, using two A76 batteries.  It uses a silicon, center-weighted meter cell, has a self-timer, a non-dedicated hot shoe, and film speeds from 12-3200. So it is a very capable shooter, and although it will not accept a motor drive, it does add two interesting features.  First, it has expanded shutter speeds (1-1/1,000, plus B & T), and it adds multiple-exposure capability.  There is a small lever in front of the film advance lever.  Simply hold this in with your index finger as you cock the shutter with your thumb. It is often seen with a Phoenix 28-80 f3.5/5.6 zoom lens.  It is the same cameras as the Seagull DF-2000A except it has a black body -- instead of champagne colored. The Phoenix P-2000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

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Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Informieren Sie sich über alle wichtigen Änderungen und Entwicklungen rund um die vertragsärztliche Tätigkeit und den Praxisalltag: Von der Abrechnung über neue digitale Anwendungen bis hin zur Qualitätssicherung.

Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Zeitlich 8 Buchstaben

Joel Poe has 12 books on Goodreads with 2613 ratings. Joel Poe's most popular book is Legend of the Phoenix Resurgence (Eternal Grind #1).

Focal length controls the angle of view and magnification of a photograph. Learn when to use Nikon zoom and prime lenses to best capture your subject.

The P-2000 is a modified version of the Minolta X-370n.  Most noticeable, it is strictly a metered-manual exposure only camera.  It has a built-in TTL meter, but it lacks the auto-exposure of the X-370n.  It has three LED's in the viewfinder which indicate the correct exposure as you manually change the shutter speed and the aperture. The viewfinder has a split-image rangefinder with a micro-prism collar, and displays LEDs on the right-hand side of the viewfinder -- a RED LED on the top for "over-exposure", a GREEN LED in the middle for "correct exposure", and a YELLOW LED on the bottom for "under-exposure" -- when the plain (non-sensa-switch) shutter release is pressed half-way.  It has an ON/OFF switch -- and no LEDs lighting up in the viewfinder is the battery check.  The shutter is an electronic, quartz-controlled, horizontal-traverse cloth curtain, using two A76 batteries.  It uses a silicon, center-weighted meter cell, has a self-timer, a non-dedicated hot shoe, and film speeds from 12-3200. So it is a very capable shooter, and although it will not accept a motor drive, it does add two interesting features.  First, it has expanded shutter speeds (1-1/1,000, plus B & T), and it adds multiple-exposure capability.  There is a small lever in front of the film advance lever.  Simply hold this in with your index finger as you cock the shutter with your thumb. It is often seen with a Phoenix 28-80 f3.5/5.6 zoom lens.  It is the same cameras as the Seagull DF-2000A except it has a black body -- instead of champagne colored. The Phoenix P-2000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Red Laser Pointers · 2 in 1 USB Rechargeable Mini Red Laser Pointer Pen With White LED Pet Light · 3 Packs Laser Pointer Pen Red Blue Green 900Mile Light ...

The name "Phoenix" is often confused with the name "Phenix".  People just assume it is some sort of typo, but there are two different companies -- one named Phoenix and the other Phenix.  Both companies made cameras that had the Minolta/Rokkor lens mount -- type DFB.  But the similarities end there.  None of the Phoenix cameras are the same as the Phenix cameras. There were either three or four Phoenix cameras with the Minolta / Rokkor lens mount -- depending on your definition. The first SLR camera with the "Phoenix" name was not made in China.  It was made in Japan in 1954 by the Orion Camera Company -- which wanted to use the "Phoenix" name, but discovered that it was already "taken". It was only a prototype, and when they discovered that the "Phoenix" name was already trade-marked, they decided to name their camera "Miranda" instead -- the "MIR" signifying the reflex mirror. In China, however, the name "PHOENIX" was not so restricted, and a company was created to make Phoenix SLR cameras -- with the Minolta DFB lens mount.  The Phoenix cameras, if not the lenses, were made by Seagull -- and all are similar to certain Seagull models. Phoenix P-2000 The P-2000 is a modified version of the Minolta X-370n.  Most noticeable, it is strictly a metered-manual exposure only camera.  It has a built-in TTL meter, but it lacks the auto-exposure of the X-370n.  It has three LED's in the viewfinder which indicate the correct exposure as you manually change the shutter speed and the aperture. The viewfinder has a split-image rangefinder with a micro-prism collar, and displays LEDs on the right-hand side of the viewfinder -- a RED LED on the top for "over-exposure", a GREEN LED in the middle for "correct exposure", and a YELLOW LED on the bottom for "under-exposure" -- when the plain (non-sensa-switch) shutter release is pressed half-way.  It has an ON/OFF switch -- and no LEDs lighting up in the viewfinder is the battery check.  The shutter is an electronic, quartz-controlled, horizontal-traverse cloth curtain, using two A76 batteries.  It uses a silicon, center-weighted meter cell, has a self-timer, a non-dedicated hot shoe, and film speeds from 12-3200. So it is a very capable shooter, and although it will not accept a motor drive, it does add two interesting features.  First, it has expanded shutter speeds (1-1/1,000, plus B & T), and it adds multiple-exposure capability.  There is a small lever in front of the film advance lever.  Simply hold this in with your index finger as you cock the shutter with your thumb. It is often seen with a Phoenix 28-80 f3.5/5.6 zoom lens.  It is the same cameras as the Seagull DF-2000A except it has a black body -- instead of champagne colored. The Phoenix P-2000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

The P-2000 is a modified version of the Minolta X-370n.  Most noticeable, it is strictly a metered-manual exposure only camera.  It has a built-in TTL meter, but it lacks the auto-exposure of the X-370n.  It has three LED's in the viewfinder which indicate the correct exposure as you manually change the shutter speed and the aperture. The viewfinder has a split-image rangefinder with a micro-prism collar, and displays LEDs on the right-hand side of the viewfinder -- a RED LED on the top for "over-exposure", a GREEN LED in the middle for "correct exposure", and a YELLOW LED on the bottom for "under-exposure" -- when the plain (non-sensa-switch) shutter release is pressed half-way.  It has an ON/OFF switch -- and no LEDs lighting up in the viewfinder is the battery check.  The shutter is an electronic, quartz-controlled, horizontal-traverse cloth curtain, using two A76 batteries.  It uses a silicon, center-weighted meter cell, has a self-timer, a non-dedicated hot shoe, and film speeds from 12-3200. So it is a very capable shooter, and although it will not accept a motor drive, it does add two interesting features.  First, it has expanded shutter speeds (1-1/1,000, plus B & T), and it adds multiple-exposure capability.  There is a small lever in front of the film advance lever.  Simply hold this in with your index finger as you cock the shutter with your thumb. It is often seen with a Phoenix 28-80 f3.5/5.6 zoom lens.  It is the same cameras as the Seagull DF-2000A except it has a black body -- instead of champagne colored. The Phoenix P-2000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Apr 17, 2023 — Step 1 - Figure out the IR codes · Turn of the spectrum LED on the device, old anecdotal evidence mentioned this can help. · Goto the RF signals ...

At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

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It is also the name of the largest manufacturer of thermal imaging cameras (FLIR Systems). Since the 1950s there are now many manufacturers of thermal infrared ...

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For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

The name "Phoenix" is often confused with the name "Phenix".  People just assume it is some sort of typo, but there are two different companies -- one named Phoenix and the other Phenix.  Both companies made cameras that had the Minolta/Rokkor lens mount -- type DFB.  But the similarities end there.  None of the Phoenix cameras are the same as the Phenix cameras. There were either three or four Phoenix cameras with the Minolta / Rokkor lens mount -- depending on your definition. The first SLR camera with the "Phoenix" name was not made in China.  It was made in Japan in 1954 by the Orion Camera Company -- which wanted to use the "Phoenix" name, but discovered that it was already "taken". It was only a prototype, and when they discovered that the "Phoenix" name was already trade-marked, they decided to name their camera "Miranda" instead -- the "MIR" signifying the reflex mirror. In China, however, the name "PHOENIX" was not so restricted, and a company was created to make Phoenix SLR cameras -- with the Minolta DFB lens mount.  The Phoenix cameras, if not the lenses, were made by Seagull -- and all are similar to certain Seagull models. Phoenix P-2000 The P-2000 is a modified version of the Minolta X-370n.  Most noticeable, it is strictly a metered-manual exposure only camera.  It has a built-in TTL meter, but it lacks the auto-exposure of the X-370n.  It has three LED's in the viewfinder which indicate the correct exposure as you manually change the shutter speed and the aperture. The viewfinder has a split-image rangefinder with a micro-prism collar, and displays LEDs on the right-hand side of the viewfinder -- a RED LED on the top for "over-exposure", a GREEN LED in the middle for "correct exposure", and a YELLOW LED on the bottom for "under-exposure" -- when the plain (non-sensa-switch) shutter release is pressed half-way.  It has an ON/OFF switch -- and no LEDs lighting up in the viewfinder is the battery check.  The shutter is an electronic, quartz-controlled, horizontal-traverse cloth curtain, using two A76 batteries.  It uses a silicon, center-weighted meter cell, has a self-timer, a non-dedicated hot shoe, and film speeds from 12-3200. So it is a very capable shooter, and although it will not accept a motor drive, it does add two interesting features.  First, it has expanded shutter speeds (1-1/1,000, plus B & T), and it adds multiple-exposure capability.  There is a small lever in front of the film advance lever.  Simply hold this in with your index finger as you cock the shutter with your thumb. It is often seen with a Phoenix 28-80 f3.5/5.6 zoom lens.  It is the same cameras as the Seagull DF-2000A except it has a black body -- instead of champagne colored. The Phoenix P-2000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-3000 The body of the P-3000 is the same as the P-2000, but the P-3000 adds several features as you might expect.  The first is that it adds autowinder capability.  The hand grip in over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1, but Phoenix, made an improved version of the Minolta Autowinder G that does fit and offers continuous and single shot exposure settings. Perhaps the most interesting feature is that the front of the autowinder is marked "SEAGULL F-10 AUTO WINDER". It also has a dedicated hot shoe for the flash -- unlike the P-2000 -- but has no PC connection. The other feature difference is the T shutter speed setting is replaced with an AUTO setting, for typical aperture-priority automatic exposure.  An AE lock is added to the self-timer lever, of course.  Manually and automatically selected shutter speeds are displayed on a typical LED scale on the right-hand side of the viewfinder. The Phoenix P-3000 was also manufactured with a Pentax K mount.   Phoenix P-5000 It's really the same thing as the Seagull DF5000. So it is obviously made by Seagull.  The only difference is that it has a "-" in the name.  It has the same Colani-designed body covering, as well as the auto-winder, but they are simply labeled "Phoenix" without any mention of Colani.  The hand grip is over-sized and too large to allow the use of the Minolta Motor Drive 1. Phoenix P5000 For some reason, the "-" was dropped from the name, otherwise it is the same as the Phoenix P-5000.  It might be that since it was manufactured by Seagull -- which labelled the Seagull version "P5000" and not "P-5000" -- that it was just easier to drop the "-". Many people only know of Phoenix because of the many lenses they make -- and they make a LOT, not just in the Minolta Rokkor mount, but in Pentax, Nikon, Contax/Yashica and several other mounts. They even make auto-focus lenses.  There are far too many to list all of them here -- even just in the Minolta Rokkor style! There are many lenses with a Minolta / Rokkor mount that are labeled "Phoenix" and some sold as "Phoenix/Samyang".  They were made in a wide variety of common and unusual prime and zoom focal lengths.  How about an 18-28mm zoom?  As with the Phoenix cameras, who knows if these lenses were made by Phoenix, Samyang, Seagull, or even Phenix!  The mystery and intrigue goes on!  Here's my favorite odd-ball Phoenix lens.  It is their 100mm f3.5 macro lens.  Like most macro lenses, it focuses to 1/2 life-size.  But unlike the typical macro lenses -- which use an extension tube to reach 1:1 life-size magnification -- Phoenix uses a close-up lens/filter that screws into the front of the lens!   Here is another winner -- a 24mm f2.8 super-wide-angle with macro capability. At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

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At the other extreme, Phoenix made 500mm lenses in various styles. It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

It was reported that either the P-5000 or the P5000 was also to be made available with a Pentax K mount, but apparently that never happened.     Shutter Shutter speeds Flash synch speed TTL meter- ing? ISO settings Auto expo- sure? AE lock? View- finder info Flash shoe Sensa- switch? PC plug? Multi- expo- sure? Cable release plug? Stop down button? Self timer? Mirror lock-up? Motor drive option? Battery used for Film indicator  Phoenix P-2000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-3000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter Film tab holder Phoenix P-5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window Phoenix P5000 cloth, horizontal 4-1,000 B 1/60 Y 12- 3200 Y Y Shutter speed scale Dedicated Y N N Y N Y N Y meter  Film window COPYRIGHT@1995-2024 by Joe McGloin. All Rights Reserved. The material on this website is protected by US Federal copyright laws and cannot be copied or used in any manner without specific approval from the owner.

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