Tamron

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Tamron Co., Ltd. (株式会社タムロン) is a Japanese company manufacturing photographic lenses, optical components and commercial/industrial-use optics. Tamron Headquarters is located in Saitama City in the Saitama Prefecture of Japan. The name of the company came from the surname of Uhyoue Tamura who was instrumental in developing Tamron's optical technologies. It was only on the company's 20th anniversary that the name was changed to Tamron (from Taisei Optical). In the fiscal year ending 31 December 2017, net sales totaled 60.496 billion yen and operating income was 4.24 billion yen, up 79.8% from 2016. At that time, the consolidated company had 4,640 employees and five production plants: in Hirosaki, Namioka and Owani in Japan, and one in China and Viet Nam, respectively. Subsidiary companies were located in the U.S., Germany, France, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Moscow and Haryana, India. Sony is a major shareholder in the company, with a 15.02% stake.

History

Products

Photographic lenses

Tamron has sold more than 5 million lenses as of September 2014. In the 2017 fiscal year, such lenses accounted for 74.9% of all sales.

Optical components

Commercial and industrial-use optics

List of photographic lenses

Most current Tamron lenses are available for Sony E-mount, Nikon F-mount, and Canon EF-mount

Designations

Overall/General Optical technology Coating technology Autofocus/Electronic technology Weather-sealing technology

Auto-focus lenses

Lenses for 35mm SLR cameras

Di lenses for full-frame DSLR cameras

Di II lenses for APS-C format DSLR cameras

Di III lenses for digital compact system cameras

Manual focus lenses

Taisei Optical made a strategic decision to specialize in developing telephoto lenses, releasing its first lens, 135 mm (Model #280), in 1958. The lens was branded Tamron, to honor its designer (Tamura Uhyoue), and used the T mount system, making it adaptable to bodies from multiple camera manufacturers. It was bundled with a dedicated 1.67× teleconverter. Taisei continued to develop the interchangeable mount, releasing the Adapt-A-Matic (アダプトマチック) series starting in 1969 with the 70~220 mm (Model PZ-30Au), which added automatic diaphragm coupling capability, followed by the Adaptall (アダプトール) series starting in 1973. The Adaptall-2 series was introduced in 1979 and production continued until 2006. In the United States, Vernon Photographic Corporation (Mt. Vernon, New York) registered the trademark Edonar in 1967 for lenses sold under its own brand. Some Edonar lenses were built by Taisei Kogaku, as engraved on the lens.

Adaptall-2 lenses and adapters (discontinued 2005/2006)

Adaptall-2 interchangeable mounts produced for:

Adaptall lenses and adapters

Adaptall (first series) mount lenses Adaptall (first series) interchangeable mounts produced for:

Adapt-A-Matic lenses and adapters

Adapt-A-Matic mount lenses Adapt-A-Matic interchangeable mounts produced for:

T2 lenses and adapters

T2 screw mount lenses T2 interchangeable mounts produced for: (Manufactured by Tamron, as well as third party manufacturers)

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