Convert An Early 60s Polaroid To Modern Film

[Adam] sent in this cool project. He has modified a Polaroid J66 camera to use modern film. Most of the initial modifications look fairly simple, but things get a little more complicated when they also convert it to a fully manual camera. There is a section that explains a neat little trick of using a cheap solar panel attached to your computer sound card to figure out what ISO the camera is shooting at.

15 thoughts on “Convert An Early 60s Polaroid To Modern Film

  1. nice mod :)

    using a solar panel works well, as they are sensitive to mid red light which neatly matches the peak response of many new films.

    Interestingly you can now get colour sensors which do the same job but with 12 bit accuracy.
    saw them on sparkfun.

  2. I have that camera, its a large fragile thing that takes crappy pics

    why do people rebuild these things so they can still use them, none of them were ever any better than K-mart consumer grade stuff and I have yet to see anything come out of them that represent even decent photography

    they were fine for taking a picture with grandma so she would remember you visited the next day, but nothing else

  3. You need to correct the article, he didn’t use a solar panel to detect ISO, he used it to determine shutter speed.

    ISO is a measurement of film sensitivity to light. The shutter is what determines the amount of light that hits the film. That and the aperture of course.

  4. Finding the ISO of a film camera is no more difficult than simply looking at what film you are using. It’s all right there.

    Sometimes its even in the name like Tri-X 400 is 400 ISO film.

    Film photography is a dying art… :(

  5. Well he bought it, so he had to do something with it:) An interesting project.

    BTW; film is both an image sensor and image storage, AFIK flash memory has yet to match that. Give Caleb a break on the ISO thing, he is only one person with way too many editors. Given how much stuff they have to wade through to have something to report, a mis-statement is going to creep through once in awhile.

Leave a Reply to TRBCancel reply

Please be kind and respectful to help make the comments section excellent. (Comment Policy)

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.