Canon uses the second letter for the year. Canon started with A in 1960 and made it to Z by 1985. In 1986 they started again at A and today, in 2007, have made it back up to V. The next two digits are the month.
- Canon Ae 1 Serial Number Year Identification. In Breton and in Rohingya, it denotes nasalization of the preceding vowel. Unlike many other letters that use diacritic marks (such as. Its alphabetical independence is similar to the English W, which historically came from a doubled V. Other languages used the macron over.
- Canon has been transitioning to a 10-digit lens serial number (starting in 2008 with the Canon EF-S 18-200mm f/3.5-5.6 IS Lens) and ending the inclusion of a separate manufacturing date code. While date codes and the shorter serial number are still found on some lenses, this inclusion will likely end completely.
- Canon Ae 1 Serial Number Year Identification. It is collated as the 1. Filipino alphabet. In old Filipino orthography, the letter was also used, along with g, to.
Canon A-1
by Karen Nakamura
Overview and Personal Comments
The Canon A-1 is an advanced manual focus SLR produced by Canon, Inc. between 1978 and 1985. It featured through the the lens (TTL) full aperture metering, automatic exposure, and aperture and shutter priority metering.The A-1 was designed as a professional level camera, complementing the consumer AE-1 which Canon had released two years earlier.
At the time of its release, the A-1 was revolutionary with an integrated CPU and a full range of automatic exposure modes. It could take the entire Canon FD series of bayonet mount lenses (which can now be bought very inexpensively on ebay at a fraction of the EOS equivalents) as well as most FL and non-FD lenses. It had AE-lock, exposure compensation, multiple exposure ability, and depth of field preview features. It was a generation ahead of any of its Nikon counterparts at the time. Using the text or images on this website without permission on an ebay auction or any other site is a violation of federal law.
Canon Ae-1 Program Serial Number Year
My Canon A-1 (serial #15001xx) was in almost mint condition when I bought it in late 2008 at an antique mall. The A-1 was built as late as 1985. There is almost no wear visible anywhere on the camera. I tested the camera fully and it works perfectly. The camera takes a 6V PX28A alkaline battery, but I put in 4 LR44 batteries with a wad of aluminium foil instead. This worked just fine.
This is an excellent camera for a student or as the second body of a professional who uses the FD system (which includes the excellent F-1). It was is perhaps the lightest of the metal-clad Canon FD body (ie, before Canon moved fully to polycarbonates in the T-series). Using the text or images on this website without permission on an ebay auction or any other site is a violation of federal law and your ebay terms of service.
Interesting quirks
The A-1 has a lot of buttons for all of its features, as befits a professional level camera. You should download the manual to get a better sense of what all of the buttons do. I think that given that this was in an era before informational LCD menu systems, that Canon did a very good job of keeping the clutter to a minimum. Even in the heat of shooting, you can easily figure out which mode you are in -- or which mode you would like to switch to.
Some of the incredible features of the A-1:
- Shutter blind on the eyepiece. This professional feature allows you to close steel shutters over the rear eyepiece with a single switch. This prevents stray light from travelling back through the eyepiece and through the pentaprism and causing problems with the exposure.
- Multiple exposure switch
- Selectable 2 and 10 second self-timer
- Built-in battery check.
- Selectable finder LED read-out shutoff.
- Automatic LED brightness dimming.
- Stop-down automatic exposure (aperture-priority) mode, great for non-FD lenses
- Metering lock
About the only negatives that I can think about the A-1 are:
- You can't do aperture-priority exposure using the lenses' aperture ring, instead you have to dial in the aperture using the multi-function dial. Boo.
- The maximum shutter speed of 1/1000 is lame, even for 1978. It should have been at least 1/2000. Similarly, the flash speed of 1/60 is slow, they could've managed 1/125 at least. My guess is that the shutter was detuned in order to make it more reliable.
- The PX28A battery isn't widely available anymore. Replace with four LR44 or SR44 batteries; or two CR1/3N or one 2CR1/3N.
Canon offered a variety of optional accessories which are often listed on ebay. They include the Canon Speedlite flashes which offer full automatic exposure as well as the power winder unit which turns the camera into a motor driven powerhorse. Using the text or images on this website without permission on an ebay auction or any other site is a violation of federal law and your ebay terms of service.
Technical Details
A-1 | |
Manufacturer | Canon, Inc. |
---|---|
Japan | |
Date of Manufacture | 1978-85 |
Single-lens reflex with pentaprism eye-level viewfinder Fixed eye-level pentaprism. 0.83x magnification (EX 50mm), 93.4% vertical coverage, 95.3% horizontal coverage. Split-image rangefinder encircled by microprism rangefinder at center with a fresnel matte screen. Digital LED readout with 7 segment for shutter speed, aperture, flash-ready, manual settings and warnings. Viewfinder blind. Optional rubber cap. | |
Lens Mount | Canon FD bayonet mount |
Focal plane shutter 30 sec.- 1/1000 | |
Metering System | SPC through the lens (TTL) metering
EV -2 to 18 |
External hot-shoe and PC connection Hotshoe has extra pins for dedicated Canon Speedlite flashes | |
Film type / speeds | Type 135 film (35mm standard) ASA 6 to 12800 |
6v PX28 alkaline (still available in some specialty stores) | |
Dimensions and weight | 141 x 92 x 48 mm, 620 g |
¥114,000 yen (w/FD 50mm f/1.4SSC) | |
Note: Using the text or images on this site in an ebay auction without permission is a violation of your ebay Terms of Service. I will report you to ebay if I discover such a violation taking place. This may result in your account being cancelled. I also reserve the right to file claim for civil penalties. |
About Canon
Canon started out its life as Seiki Kohgaku Kenkyuujo (Precision Optical Research Company). Its first goal was to produce domestic inexpensive Leica clones, and it released the Kwanon, its first camera in 1934. Interestingly, they used Nikon lenses since Nikon was already established as an optical lens manufacturer and was not making any of its own camera bodies at that time. Canon soon gained the ability to make their own lenses and never looked back. Nikon also went on to produce some reasonably popular cameras of its own as well.
The name 'Canon' comes from the Buddhist deity Kwanon and early Canon cameras were actually spelled 'Kwanon' and the lenses were named 'Kyasapa' after another deity.
Side note: Canon is my favorite Japanese company along with Honda. I actually interned for Canon Japan (ok, Canon Sales Japan, a part of the Canon keiretsu) during a summer in college and loved my coworkers to death. They keep coming out with innovations that take your breath away.
On the Net
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Canon camera date codes
According to Bob Atkins, the site of whom I would suggest the Canon collectors to visit, : « Because they are chronological, serial numbers usually do tell the approximate age of a Canon SLR or SLR lens, but Canon Inc. has never put out any sort of public info about it. However, there's another way to get the information: look inside the body's film chamber for an alphanumeric code printed in black ink on the black surface of the film chamber. You may have to hold the camera under a strong light to see it. What you'll see is a date code, possibly something like 'U1140F'. »
Canon Ae 1 Battery
Bob says : « The first letter tells the year the camera was manufactured: in this case, 1980. It's an alphabetic code; A = 1960, B = 1961,....T = 1979, U = 1980, and so on up to Z = 1985. The next 2 numbers tell you what month the camera was made, in this example, November. (the leading zero for the month code is sometimes omitted, so an A-1 with a code of 'Y362' would have been manufactured in March, 1984, for instance.) The following 2 numbers are an internal code that is irrelevant for determining age, but year and month is close enough anyway, IMO. (This internal code is also occasionally omitted based on reports from Canon owners.) The last letter stands for the name of the factory. In this case, 'F' stands for Fukushima which was the main Canon SLR factory for about 20 years from the early 70s until 1991. (The factory code is rarely omitted, if ever.) »
He adds : « Starting in 1986, the year code was restarted with 'A' again, but the factory code was placed before it. Now that Canon SLRs are no longer manufactured at Fukushima, you're more likely to see a code starting with 'O' for Oita. So, for SLRs manufactured in 1994, you might see a code starting with 'OI' followed by the month code. »
« Incidentally, the same type of code is printed on the back of most EF lenses as well, typically in small white characters on a black baffle in the rear lens mount. Since Canon's SLR lens factory is in Utsonomiya, you might see a date code starting with 'UG' for a lens manufactured in 1992, for example. Previous to 1986, though, the lens date codes did not include the factory letter. »
(Courtesy of Bob Atkins http://www.bobatkins.com. All Rights Reserved)
This gives the following table for the months and the years so far.
Date Codes table | |||||
Letter | 1st series | 2nd series | 3rd series | Digits | Months |
A | 1960 | 1986 | 2012 | 1 or 01 | January |
B | 1961 | 1987 | 2013 | 2 or 02 | February |
C | 1962 | 1988 | 3 or 03 | March | |
D | 1963 | 1989 | 4 or 04 | April | |
E | 1964 | 1990 | 5 or 05 | May | |
F | 1965 | 1991 | 6 or 06 | June | |
G | 1966 | 1992 | 7 or 07 | July | |
H | 1967 | 1993 | 8 or 08 | August | |
I | 1968 | 1994 | 9 or 09 | September | |
J | 1969 | 1995 | 10 | October | |
K | 1970 | 1996 | 11 | November | |
L | 1971 | 1997 | 12 | December | |
M | 1972 | 1998 | |||
N | 1973 | 1999 | |||
O | 1974 | 2000 | |||
P | 1975 | 2001 | |||
Q | 1976 | 2002 | |||
R | 1977 | 2003 | |||
S | 1978 | 2004 | |||
T | 1979 | 2005 | |||
U | 1980 | 2006 | |||
V | 1981 | 2007 | |||
W | 1982 | 2008 | |||
X | 1983 | 2009 | |||
Y | 1984 | 2010 | |||
Z | 1985 | 2011 |
Canon Lens Date Codes
Beside the rear lens element of many (but not all) Canon lenses is a date code (as seen above) in the form of 'UR0902'. This code is also present on many other Canon products including camera bodies.
The first letter, 'U', indicates that the lens was made in Canon's Utsunomiya, Japan factory. Prior to 1986, this letter is moved to the last position of the date code.
U = Utsunomiya, Japan
F = Fukushima, Japan
O = Oita, Japan
The second letter, 'R', is a year code that indicates the year of manufacture. Canon increments this letter each year starting with A in 1986 and prior to that, A in 1960 without the leading factory code. Here is a table to make things simple:
Canon Ae 1 Serial Number Years List
Date Codes table | |||
Letter | 1st series | 2nd series | 3rd series |
A | 1960 | 1986 | 2012 |
B | 1961 | 1987 | 2013 |
C | 1962 | 1988 | 2014 |
D | 1963 | 1989 | 2015 |
E | 1964 | 1990 | |
F | 1965 | 1991 | |
G | 1966 | 1992 | |
H | 1967 | 1993 | |
I | 1968 | 1994 | |
J | 1969 | 1995 | |
K | 1970 | 1996 | |
L | 1971 | 1997 | |
M | 1972 | 1998 | |
N | 1973 | 1999 | |
O | 1974 | 2000 | |
P | 1975 | 2001 | |
Q | 1976 | 2002 | |
R | 1977 | 2003 | |
S | 1978 | 2004 | |
T | 1979 | 2005 | |
U | 1980 | 2006 | |
V | 1981 | 2007 | |
W | 1982 | 2008 | |
X | 1983 | 2009 | |
Y | 1984 | 2010 | |
Z | 1985 | 2011 |
Last update : Dec-20-2019 15:55:02: CET
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