Difference between revisions of "Kodak DCS 100"

From Camera-wiki.org
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Moved image to the right so text would flow alongside it.)
m (Added megapixel count.)
Line 8: Line 8:
 
}}
 
}}
  
The '''[[Kodak]] DCS 100''' was the first (1991) [[digital back|digital SLR back]], developed and made by Kodak. It is attachable to a regular [[Nikon F3]] [[35mm]] SLR body. It is tethered to a separate data storage unit. The system was originally just called '''DCS''', but the designation DCS 100 distinguishes it from the self-contained [[Kodak DCS 200]] introduced in 1992. The sensor format  was smaller than the [[APS-C]] format of which later dominated the [[DSLR]] market in the milleniums first decade 2000-2009.
+
The '''[[Kodak]] DCS 100''' was the first (1991) [[digital back|digital SLR back]], developed and made by Kodak. It is attachable to a regular [[Nikon F3]] [[35mm]] SLR body. It is tethered to a separate data storage unit which could record 1.3 megapixel images. The system was originally just called '''DCS''', but the designation DCS 100 distinguishes it from the self-contained [[Kodak DCS 200]] introduced in 1992. The sensor format  was smaller than the [[APS-C]] format of which later dominated the [[DSLR]] market in the milleniums first decade 2000-2009.
 
<br clear="all"/>
 
<br clear="all"/>
  

Revision as of 21:39, 21 September 2016

The Kodak DCS 100 was the first (1991) digital SLR back, developed and made by Kodak. It is attachable to a regular Nikon F3 35mm SLR body. It is tethered to a separate data storage unit which could record 1.3 megapixel images. The system was originally just called DCS, but the designation DCS 100 distinguishes it from the self-contained Kodak DCS 200 introduced in 1992. The sensor format was smaller than the APS-C format of which later dominated the DSLR market in the milleniums first decade 2000-2009.


Links