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  2. NOBLEX E-Optics GmbH - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NOBLEX_E-Optics_GmbH

    A year after the German reunification, the Eisfeld plant of the Jenoptik Carl Zeiss Jena GmbH, which employed 550 staff, was taken over by Bernhard Docter, who lent his name to the company and products. The company now traded under the name Docter-Optic-Eisfeld GmbH and continued with the production of binoculars, riflescopes, spotting scopes ...

  3. Meyer Optik Görlitz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meyer_Optik_Görlitz

    Many products were discontinued in favor of competing models produced by Carl Zeiss, while the equipment required to produce high-quality zoom lenses could not be procured. In 1990, Feinoptische Werk Görlitz was spun off from VEB Carl Zeiss and converted into a private limited company and started to produce lenses with the Meyer-Optik logo.

  4. Ross (optics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ross_(optics)

    Ross patented a wide-angle lens design and Zeiss took this further to produce their EWA Protars. Before World War 1, Ross and Zeiss worked quite closely together, but at the outbreak of War the British Government put Ross in control of the newly opened Carl Zeiss binocular and optical factory in Mill Hill, London.

  5. Carl Zeiss AG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Zeiss_AG

    First workshop of Carl Zeiss in the center of Jena, c. 1847 Carl Zeiss Jena (1910) One of the Stasi's cameras with the special SO-3.5.1 (5/17mm) lens developed by Carl Zeiss, a so-called "needle eye lens", for shooting through keyholes or holes down to 1 mm in diameter 2 historical lenses of Carl Zeiss, Nr. 145077 and Nr. 145078, Tessar 1:4,5 F=5,5cm DRP 142294 (produced before 1910) Carl ...

  6. Category:Zeiss lenses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Zeiss_lenses

    Pages in category "Zeiss lenses" The following 24 pages are in this category, out of 24 total. ... Zeiss Batis; List of Carl Zeiss Bessamatic DKL-mount lenses;

  7. Binoculars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binoculars

    Most roof prism binoculars use either the Schmidt–Pechan prism (invented in 1899) or the Abbe–Koenig prism (named after Ernst Karl Abbe and Albert König and patented by Carl Zeiss in 1905) designs to erect the image and fold the optical path. They have objective lenses that are approximately in a line with the eyepieces.