The Minox 35 GT, introduced in 1981, continued Minox’s successful range of 35mm compact cameras, reputedly the smallest full-frame 35mm cameras ever made.
The Minox 35 GT, introduced in 1981, continued Minox’s successful range of 35mm compact cameras, reputedly the smallest full-frame 35mm cameras ever made. The lens retracts into the camera body when closed; fully opening the cover activates the battery. Exposure is automatic, aperture priority. Shutter release buttons identified different models in the Minox 35 range in differing colours: the GT is easily identified by its yellow shutter release button.
Minox35GT-Top-02.jpg
The GT improved features of its predecessors, the EL and the GL. It introduced an electronic self-timer, with a flashing LED above the camera’s name. Another improvement on the previous models is the siting of the cable release socket to the side of the shutter release button, to prevent accidental triggering of the shutter.
What makes the camera remarkable (besides its small size) is the accuracy of it’s low-light exposure metering. Specifically, the exposure system gets the exposure right at night, though the colors recorded by the film may shift somewhat due the its photo-chemical limitations. Simply set up the camera on a suitable tripod or hard surface, use the 10-second timer (to eliminate vibrations), and wait for the shutter sounds to signal that the picture has been taken. Even 1/2+hr exposures come off without a hitch, allowing you to capture star movements, for example. Later editions of the camera do not feature the same exposure system.
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