Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Minolta AF 100–200 mm f /4.5, typical of original lens styling, with narrow straight-ribbed focusing ring at front, distance window, diagonal rubber-ribbed zoom ring ...
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide ... Summaron-M 28mm f /5.6. Summilux-M 28 mm f /1.4 ...
Eureka's earliest tents, assembled from untreated white army duck, were so robust that a completely usable early Eureka tent still hung in the company's headquarters nearly one hundred years later. [3] In 1910, pioneering businessmen, Arthur D. Legg and Walter A. Dickerman purchased the company from its original owners. [4]
In 1910 Arthur Roussel was hired to build a machine that would enable the public to view a film inside their home. Pathé Frères introduced a 28 mm film size for home use. 28 mm diacetate film was preferable for non-professional use because it was not flammable like 35 mm film with a nitrate base, and usage of the 28 mm film also gave Pathé Frères exclusivity, by way of patents. [2]
1995: Pentax introduces the world’s first fish-eye zoom lens. That lenses was the F 17-28mm F3.5-4.5 Fish-eye Zoom. [1] 2000: Pentax develops and commercializes the world's first diffractive DVD/CD-compatible hybrid pickup lens. [1] 2009: Pentax introduces the world’s first autofocus fisheye lens. That lens is the DA 10-17mm ED (IF) Fish ...
Gunpowder Revolution - Renaissance Warfare V 6 (Computer Moderated Miniature Wargame Rules) (Computer Strategies, 2007) Guns of Liberty (American War of Independence) (Eric Burgess, 1998) Gå På (Great Northern War, War of the Spanish Succession) (Thomas Årnfelt) Habitants and Highlanders (French and Indian War) (Canadian Wargamers Group, 1992)
The Eureka Springs & North Arkansas Railway is a for-profit passenger tourist railway established by the late Robert Dortch, Jr. and his wife Mary Jane in 1981 in Eureka Springs, Arkansas. The railway offers one-hour excursion tours, a catered luncheon train and a catered dinner train - each lasting a little more than one hour, from April ...
Early German musket with serpentine lock. A matchlock or firelock [1] is a historical type of firearm wherein the gunpowder is ignited by a burning piece of flammable cord or twine that is in contact with the gunpowder through a mechanism that the musketeer activates by pulling a lever or trigger with their finger.