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Kiron Corporation

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Kiron 70–150mm f/4.0
Kiron 70–150mm f/4.0

Kiron Lenses were photographic lenses distributed by the Kiron Corporation, formerly based in Carson, California, USA.

History

The company was set up as a U.S. subsidiary of Kino Precision Industries Limited, Tokyo, Japan in 1978–79, in order to market manually-focused film camera optical lenses to the United States. Kino Precision was originally formed by a group of engineers formerly employed at Nikon, who had developed their own designs for 35mm (24x36mm) film format camera lenses. These lenses were offered in a variety of camera mounts to fit a number of different Japanese cameras, including Canon, Contax, Konica, Minolta, Nikon, Olympus, and Pentax.

Originally, Kino Precision manufactured some of the now-famous Series 1 manual focus lenses under contract for Vivitar, a U.S. lens distributor of after-market film lenses for 35mm cameras. However, after the positive reception from consumers on Vivitar Series 1 lenses, the company believed the time was right to successfully market lenses to fit existing 35mm Japanese film cameras under their own brand, Kiron. Kiron soon became known as one of the very few after-market lens manufacturers that could supply products equal to or even exceeding the optical and mechanical quality of the original manufacturer. In particular, the Kiron 28mm/2.0, the 105mm/2.8 1:1 macro[1], the 28-210mm/4.0-5.6 and the 3.8-5.6 varifocal zoom, and the 28-85mm/2.8-3.8 varifocal macro zoom lenses were praised in contemporary reviews of the day for their superb optical resolution and clarity, as well as mechanical quality.[2][3][4]

Although reasonably priced for the level of quality offered, Kiron manual focus lenses were never economy-level products, and were always made and assembled in Japan.[5] As such, Kiron lenses produced during the 1980s were normally priced only slightly below lenses offered by the camera manufacturers themselves. Later, Vivitar itself would purchase some Kiron/Kino lens designs, (such as the Kiron 105mm f/2.8 macro lens, re-labeled as the Vivitar 100mm f/2.8 macro and the Vivitar 105mm/2.5 (1:1) macro lenses), and offered them for sale under the Vivitar brand.

The increasing cost of quality lens manufacture in Japan led to a loss of sales for Kiron, as the company could no longer offer its lenses at a cost less than that charged by the camera manufacturers, who had begun to offer economy-level lens designs as well as contracting lens assembly operations in lower-cost factories outside Japan. Additionally, the 35mm camera market was in flux by the late 1980s, and 35mm camera manufacturers were transitioning to autofocus lens designs. By 1988, the company decided to discontinue after-market 35mm camera lens production to concentrate on industrial and other markets.

In 1989 Kino Precision Industries merged with 'Melles Griot Japan' to form 'Kino-Melles Griot'.

In 1995 the firm has changed its name to 'Melles Griot Ltd', and subsequently became a member of CVI Melles Griot Group in 2007.

In June 2011 Illinois-based IDEX Corporation completed its $400 million acquisition of the laser and optical component maker CVI Melles Griot from its previous owner, the private equity firm Norwest Equity Partners.

Types

Lenses for 35 mm film cameras:

  • 24mm 1:2.0
  • 28mm 1:2.8
  • 28mm 1:2.0
  • 28–70mm 1:3.5–4.5 (two versions)
  • 28–70mm 1:4.0
  • 28–85mm 1:2.8–3.8 varifocal macro zoom (aka "The Stovepipe")
  • 28–105mm 1:3.2–4.5 (two versions) varifocal zoom
  • 28-210mm 1:3.8-5.6 varifocal zoom (14 elements/11 groups)
  • 28–210mm 1:4.0–5.6 varifocal zoom (14 elements/11 groups)
  • 30–80mm 1:3.5–4.5 varifocal zoom
  • 35–135mm 1:3.5–4.5 varifocal zoom
  • 105mm 1:2.8 (macro 1:1)(6 elements/6 groups)
  • 70–150mm 1:4.0
  • 70–210mm 1:4.0 (two versions)
  • 70–210mm 1:4.5
  • 80–200mm 1:4.0
  • 80–200mm 1:4.5 (six versions)

Lenses were made in the following lens mounts:

References

  1. '^ Zes Maal Rond De 100mm, FOTO (March 1985) pp. 16-20: In a review of 100mm focal length macro lenses, FOTO found the Kiron 105/2.8 macro outperformed both the Micro Nikkor 105mm/2.8 AIS and Tokina 90mm/2.5 macro lenses.
  2. ^ Modern Photography, Kiron 28-85mm Varifocal Macro Zoom Review, March 1981: As one example, the 28-85mm varifocal was tested by Modern Photography, which reported 34 out of 36 excellent ratings for center and corner sharpness at 28, 50, and 85mm (the two holdouts were both 'very good'). Contrast rated as all highs at 28mm, all but one high at 50mm, and mostly high at 85mm.
  3. ^ Keppler, Herbert, Super Stretch Zooms, Do you Lose Picture Quality?, Modern Photography (June 1986), pp. 34-35,74
  4. ^ Shutterfinger, A Look Back At Lenses, 11 April 2009
  5. ^ Ortner, Everett H., Through The Viewfinder: All-Range Zoom, Popular Science (April 1981), pp. 26-28: The 1981 price for the Kiron 28-85/2.8-3.8 zoom was $449 - $1,060.00 in 2009 dollars.

See also