No, I'm not talking about Chinese balloons here. What I'm talking about is this...
Not the Cineroc, but the Camroc on the right. You see, this was the first camera that could be launched on a model rocket! (The Cineroc was the first super 8 movie camera that was launchable).
In 1966, Estes Industries developed (see what I did there?) the Camroc rocket camera. The idea was extremely simple. A rubber band shutter was held closed until the parachute popped out, at which time it was released and snapped a single picture on Tri-X black and white film. The lens was in the nose of the rocket, so the rocket needed to be past apogee and pointing back at the ground before it popped. Otherwise you got a great shot of the sky! (Which was NOT great)
Anyway, I had one as a kid and took exactly one picture with it. I got lucky and got a really good picture of the hobby shop that we went to. I gave the picture to the owner and that was that. The camera was lost in the years after.
However, a month or so ago a even more senior member of our rocket club was selling a lot of his old stuff, and I bought his Camroc box! Here it is!
I knew kids who had Estes rockets when I was a kid, I was always so jealous that they were allowed to build and launch them. My grandparents actually bought us an Estes kit, but my mom didn't want us messing with it. Boo!
ReplyDeleteThat Camroc item is pretty neat, and has to be very rare. I just sort of love thinking about the days when folks had to use ingenuity to take a photo from their model rocket!
Thanks for sharing.
I'm sorry you didn't get to build your kit! Double Boo!!!
ReplyDeleteCamrocs are pretty rare, but Cinerocs are the unicorn of old model rocket technology!