Prontor-Compur

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PC-socket, greatly magnified

A Prontor-Compur connection (also known as a PC connector, PC terminal, or PC socket) is a standard 3.5 mm (1/8") electrical connector (as defined in ISO 519[1]) used in photography to synchronize the shutter to the flash.[2]

Etymology

A leaf shutter

"Prontor" has its origins in the Italian word "pronto", meaning ready (and was a leaf shutter made by de [Alfred Gauthier Calmbach; Alfred Gauthier]).[3] "Compur" is derived from the word "compound" (the "de [Compound (shutter); Compound]" was a long-lived series of leaf shutters made by de [Friedrich Deckel]).

History

The term is derived from brands of popular and successful leaf shutters manufactured from the early 1950s by two distinct, but now defunct German companies. de [Alfred Gauthier Calmbach; Gauthier] (which made the Prontor-S and Prontor SV models, amongst others) and de [Friedrich Deckel; Deckel] (the Synchro-Compur model, successor to the Compound model).

Both companies' brands, Prontor (from 1953) and Compur (from 1951), shared a standard 1/8"-inch coaxial connector for shutter/flash synchronization. This convergence of design is not as coincidental as it might first appear, owing to the fact that the Zeiss organisation held a significant shareholding in both of these companies prior to the introduction of the shared connector.[4] By the 1950s, Gauthier were manufacturing up to 10,000 Prontor shutters daily.

The Gauthier company's essence lives on as de [Prontor GmbH], which is a wholly owned subsidiary of de [VTC Industrieholding GmbH].[5] The Deckel company went bankrupt in 1994.

References

  1. ^ ISO 519:1974, ISO 519:1992 (1992-11-25). Photography -- Hand-held cameras -- Flash-connector dimensions. Geneva: International Organization for Standardization.
  2. ^ Axford, Norman; et al. (2000). Manual of Photography: Photographic and Digital Imaging. Focal Press. ISBN 0-240-51574-9. {{cite book}}: Explicit use of et al. in: |author2= (help)
  3. ^ History of the Prontor company. http://www.prontor.de/go/unternehmen-firmengeschichte/english.html
  4. ^ History of flash photography. http://www.photomemorabilia.co.uk/Ilford/Flash_History.html
  5. ^ Timeline of Prontor company. http://www.prontor.de/go/unternehmen-firmengeschichte/english.html

See also