Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Meopta

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Formerly called
  
Optikotechna

Website
  
[1]

Area served
  
Worldwide

Founded
  
1933

Meopta wwwhuntersparadisechassetsimagesJagdOptikme

Industry
  
Optical, opto-mechanical and opto-electronic systems

Headquarters
  
Přerov, Czech Republic Hauppauge, New York

Products
  
Consumer, Industrial & Military applications

Founders
  
Alois Mazurek, Alois Beneš

Meopta optika s r o the p rausnitz award at the idet trade fair 2015


Meopta optika sro is a Czech Republic based company that manufactures various products mainly in the field of optics. The company was started in 1933 under name Optikotechna in Přerov with the intention of producing a limited range of lenses and condensers, however the production rapidly expanded to include enlargers, composite lenses, binoculars, rifle scopes, cameras and slide projectors. Meopta U.S.A., Inc. is a separate American company that manufactures and assembles optical and optomechanical systems for the Consumer, Industrial and Military Markets.

Contents

After 1935, Meopta optika became a subsidiary of Zbrojovka Brno and a major supplier of military optics for the Czechoslovak Army. Company retained its focus on military production when it was seized by Germans during the occupation of Czechoslovakia as well as after WW2, when it was nationalized and renamed as Meopta – an acronym for Mechanická optická výroba - mechanical optical manufacturing. Apart from military deliveries, the company became one of the world's major manufacturers of cinema projectors between 1947 and 1970. The abrupt halt of military demand after the dissolution of Warsaw pact forced the company to refocus mainly on civilian applications.

Today, military production constitutes about 10% of company's production, with 20% of its turnover being generated mainly by optics for sports and hunting applications and 70% being generated by production of optics for cinema and other projectors, optical tools for microprocessors manufacturing quality control, as well as optics for healthcare which are used in various applications such as RTG or mammography.

The company was privatized in 1992. Its majority owners are a Czech family that emigrated to the United States in 1946 amidst the rising power of communists in the Soviet Union liberated and dominated Czechoslovakia. During WW2 the three brothers had been - together with both their parents - active soldiers of the 1st Czechoslovak Army Corps and were decorated for their war duty.

Meopta U.S.A., Inc. is a separate company that was founded by the same Czech-American family in New York in 1960 under the name Tyrolit Company, Inc. At that time, its main business was selling grinding wheels in US and Canada. Tyrolit gradually changed its focus to manufacturing various optical products and in 2005 was renamed to Meopta U.S.A., Inc.

36 d l mapa sp chu meopta optika s r o


8 mm Cameras

  • OP 8 (1939)
  • Sonet 8 (1956)
  • Admira 8 D (1946–47)
  • Admira 8 IIa (1954)
  • Admira 8 F (1960–64)
  • Admira EL 8 (1960) - one and only camera having the Zoom lens
  • Admira 8 G1 (1966–68)
  • Admira 8 G2 (1966)
  • Admira 8 G0 (1968–73)
  • Admira 8 G1 Supra (1968–71)
  • Admira 8 G2 Supra (1968–71)
  • Admira 8 L1 Supra (1971)
  • Admira 8 L2 Supra (1971)
  • Supra is an indication for Super 8.

    9.5 mm Cameras

  • Admira Ledvinka (Pocket) (1934)
  • 16 mm Cameras

  • Admira 16 (1937)
  • Admira 16 A1 el. (1963–68)
  • 8 mm and 9.5 mm Projectors

  • Scolar (1934)
  • Sonet 8 (1938)
  • OP 8 (1936)
  • Optilux (1945–50)
  • Jubilar 9.5 (1945–50)
  • Atom (1940–45)
  • Meo 8 (1954–60)
  • AM 8 (1960–69)
  • Meocord (1966–67)
  • AM 8 Super (1967–70)
  • Meolux I (1969)
  • Meolux II (1972–77)
  • Meos (1978)
  • Meos Duo (1977–86)
  • KP 8-2 Super (1976–80)
  • 16 mm Projectors

  • OP16 silent and sound (1938)
  • OP 16 (1951)
  • Opefon (1945)
  • Almo 16 (1936)
  • Pictureta (1936)
  • Meopton I (1945–50)
  • Meopton II (1945–50)
  • Meopton IIa (1966)
  • Club 16 (1962–63)
  • Meoclub 16 (1965)
  • Meoclub 16 Automatic (1968)
  • Meoclub 16 Automatic H (1970)
  • Meoclub 16 Standard (1974–78)
  • Meoclub 16 Electronic (1980–84)
  • Meoclub 16 AS 2 (1982–84)
  • Meoclub 16 Electronic 2 (1984)
  • 35 mm Projectors

  • Eta 7 (1947)
  • Meopton III (1955–57)
  • Meopton IV (1959) - IV S with magnetic soundhead
  • UM 70/35 (1963–73)
  • MEO 5X series (1978-?)
  • References

    Meopta Wikipedia