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The Fujica X-mount was a lens mount created by Fujifilm in the late 1970s and early 1980s for the new Fujica SLR lineup: AX-1, AX-3, AX-5, AX Multi, STX-1, STX-1N, STX-2, MPF105X, MPF105XN. It replaced the M42 screw mount used on their earlier SLRs. The mount is a bayonet type, with a 65° clockwise lock, and a flange focal distance of 43.5 mm. [1]
The Fujifilm X-mount is a lens mount for Fujifilm interchangeable lens mirrorless cameras in its X-series, designed for 23.6mm x 15.6mm APS-C sensors. Various lens manufacturers use this mount, such as Fujifilm's own XF and XC lenses, Carl Zeiss AG ( Touit lenses), Samyang Optics , Handevision, SLR Magic, Viltrox and Zhongyi Optics.
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The Fujifilm X-T1 is a weather-resistant mirrorless interchangeable lens camera announced by Fujifilm on January 28, 2014. It uses the Fujifilm X-mount and is the first entry in the X-T lineage of DSLR-styled X series cameras. The X-T2 was announced as the successor to the X-T1 on July 7, 2016. [2]
X-mount may refer to: Fujica X-mount , a bayonet lens mount used on manual-focus Fujica 35mm film SLR cameras in the 1970s and 1980s Fujifilm X-mount , a fully electronic bayonet lens mount used on Fujifilm mirrorless APS-C digital cameras and XF lenses since 2012
However, Olympus FTL lenses and Fujica screw mount lenses had a projecting cam which means that they cannot be fully screwed down on a regular screw mount body. Chinon used a different system to provide aperture priority mode with standard Auto-M42 lenses with the CE Memotron (1974), CE-II Memotron and CE-3 Memotron bodies.
The Fujifilm X-T4 is a mirrorless interchangeable-lens digital camera announced on February 25, 2020. [3] It has a backside-illuminated X-Trans CMOS 4 APS-C sensor and an X-Processor 4 quad core processor and uses the Fujifilm X-mount.
After unpopular and uncoordinated attempts to modify the screw mount to support auto-diaphragm lenses with open aperture metering, [411] Asahi abandoned the M42 screw mount in 1975, [412] effectively ending production of this lens mounting system. 1971 Fujica ST701 (Japan): first SLR with silicon photodiode light meter sensors.