Your Submissions: Latest  Popular  Most Comments 

NASA Hasselblad for sale


EBay seller Photo-arsenal-worldwide is flogging this mint-in-package NASA Hasselblad camera; bidding now stands at nearly $34,000. I love how everything in space looks like it was descended from a Tonka truck.

Hasselblad MKWE Kit brand new made for NASA (via Dinosaurs and Robots)

Clip to Evernote

23 Comments Add a comment

wrybread #1 11:52 PM Thursday, Sep 16, 2010 Reply

I know this is a minor point, but I don't think there's actual bidding happening on that camera, only a "buy it now", right? As I type this the buy-it-now price is $33,751.00, which is an oddly specific number, so maybe that "make offer" button is in fact changing that number?

cratermoon #2 11:56 PM Thursday, Sep 16, 2010 Reply

I call BS on the "made for NASA" claim. The MKWE is a special model for photogrammetry, but there's nothing NASA-specific about it. Show me the provenance.

Anon #3 12:06 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

I am going to make an offer of $14.57

seems reasonable to me

Anon #4 12:14 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

Didn't the astronauts leave a Hassy on the moon?

Anon #5 1:35 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

Ditto on the doubts about the "made for NASA" claim, unless you count pens and pencils with a NASA logo made to use in a NASA office somewhere equally as "made for NASA"...
This is not a "spaceworthy" or "spaceproofed" piece of hardware, it's simply a photogrammetry camera from Hasselblads respective series. (It has a reseau plate for photogrammetry just like the Hasselblads used on the moon during Apollo had them, but that doesn't make this example one of those.)
It's up for sale, not for auction, and to be honest the price is a hoot. It doesn't seem to be selling either - if you check around a bit, you will find this particular piece on ebay mentioned in photography forums way over a year ago.

friendpuppy replied to comment from wrybread #6 1:49 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

As far as I know, and I've sold a lot of stuff on eBay, the Buy It Now doesn't fluctuate. The seller may be seeing lower bids and adjusting, but I don't think the Buy It Now price varies. It is a strangely uneven price though.

shadowfirebird #7 2:18 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

It was my understanding that the first Hassleblad used in space was a standard model; it was the private property of the astronaut. And it worked fine.

If that's true, the "specialness" of this item is questionable.

Anon #8 3:41 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

I think the NASA camera must look something like this one:

http://www.westlicht-auction.com/files/7130f28aa173ea1546dfbf7324af2c96ba29.jpg

sold at 26K Euros! at westlicht auction

Michael Smith replied to comment from Anonymous #9 4:20 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

Yeah right at the end of Apollo 16 the plan was for John Young to leave a camera on the rover with the lens cap off and the lens facing straight up. The idea was that the glass surface could be used to estimate micrometeorite impact rates when the camera was retrieved in the future.

The problem is that John can't remember actually putting the camera in that position. I have the same problem with my garage door. Did I actually put it down? I should have but I can't remember.

Actually I believe anything not needed for the flight back got chucked before lift off. And that would have included most of the cameras.

PaulR #10 5:10 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

I wonder if whoever might have bid on this camera had enough gumption to go to Hasselblad's website, eh? Or to google "hasselblad nasa"? And make the effort to click on the first link provided...

http://www.hasselblad.com/about-hasselblad/hasselblad-in-space/space-cameras.aspx

I did have some tip-offs before I googled: The colour (I remembered them as matte black or silver), the fact that the film magazine in the for-sale ad wasn't a 500-exposure back, the "can't be operated with thick gloves" shutter release, etc, etc...

See here, too:http://www.dlr.de/en/Portaldata/1/Resources/veranstaltungen/sternstunden/hasselblad_nasa.jpg

jmcgarry #11 6:20 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

As soon as I saw the yellow I was disappointed. Those old 500 models were sweet, I love my 500E/LM and think of the Apollo astronauts and their striped down 500c every time I dig mine out.

mercator #12 6:42 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

In an earlier life, I worked with an Mk70 that was reported to be made to NASA specs. It didn't look as flashy as this unit, but tt had a calibrated reseau plate and an excellent remote control interface. The problem was that it used unperforated 70mm film that was impossible to find.

Caroline #13 9:34 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

My husband is a photographer who also loves astronomy. I had better go and check to make sure he didn't drool all over the iPad when he checked BoingBoing this morning.

That thing really does look sexy.

foxtails #14 10:23 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

Why can't every piece of equipment look this cool, with a sharp color palette?

Anon #15 11:19 AM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

Looks like a Polaroid Swinger on steroids.

Okay, I've had my say. I'll just take my hat and go now.

Zadaz #16 12:44 PM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

Calling bullshit.

If you do a Google image search for "NASA Hasselblad" you get a ton of great photos of great cameras. But not this one. (The exception is the occasional link to the ebay photo making fun of it.)

sdmikev #17 1:52 PM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

Even if that is a "made for NASA" camera, so what?
You can go on the interwebs and buy an Omega Speedmaster Professional (the manual wind model). That's something that was REALLY made for NASA. And anyone can have one. I do, mine was made in 1974. :)

forgeweld #18 2:11 PM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

Everything in space
Looks like it was descended
From a Tonka truck

-Best English language Haiku poem ever.

Ted8305 #19 4:39 PM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

Love the color. Look at that camera. Just look at it. Not only is it awesome, you can operate it without fingernails.

penguinchris replied to comment from PaulR #20 5:10 PM Friday, Sep 17, 2010 Reply

Be sure to check out the PDF of the 1984 astronaut's camera manual. Really great stuff in there - interesting details of operating the cameras, and very well written stuff about exposure, composition, and so forth. A great read. The rest of the Hasselblad site regarding their cameras in space is interesting too, but not very well written in my opinion. That page with all the space cameras is very cool, though.

All of the actual space cameras look way, way cooler than this yellow one. This one has its charms, but lacks the flavor that comes from actually being highly functional for specific tasks like the real ones.

Anon #21 7:21 AM Saturday, Sep 18, 2010 Reply

if you want to see original nasa hasselblad and how to make difference between original and replica you can go to
http://www.clubhasselblad.com

mocon #22 8:22 PM Saturday, Sep 18, 2010 Reply

The story may be nonsense, but you have to admit that's a pornigraphically beautiful piece of equipment.

Or maybe I've got problems of my own.

*mocon

Anon #23 12:19 AM Sunday, Sep 19, 2010 Reply

I am going to make an offer of $50

Remise en main propre sur Vichy ou Clermont
06-58-87-52-42

Send a comment

Unregistered

Read the full moderation policy. Thank you!

 

About

About Boing Boing

Contact Us

Press Inquiries

Policies

Commenting Policy

Archives

Mark Frauenfelder

Cory Doctorow

David Pescovitz

Xeni Jardin

Rob Beschizza

More

Categories

Technology

Gadgets

Culture

Games

Entertainment

Science

Business

Art and Design

Video

Steampunk

Weird

More

Twitter

BoingBoing

Mark

Cory

David

Xeni

Rob

Brandon

Lisa

Maggie

Dean

Facebook

BoingBoing

Shop

Boing Boing Bazaar

Amazon Store

More BB

Boing Boing Video

Flickr Pool

Digg

Wikipedia

Advertise

Display ads

RSS and Email

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution. Boing Boing is a trademark of Happy Mutants LLC in the United States and other countries.