Endings and New Beginnings
Relatively cheap, high
quality Japanese cameras were now appearing in most U.K. camera
shops and in response to this the major German manufacturers reduced
their prices. Corfield's realised that in order to survive they
needed a large injection of capital so that they could improve their
existing facilities and produce a camera that could successfully
compete with the new competition. Unfortunately in the early 1960's
investors were few and far between. Fortunately, Guinness the Irish
brewer was looking for investments in Northern Ireland and so
Corfields made an approach.
Eventually an
agreement with Guinness was reached which would allow Corfields to
carry on producing cameras and give them the much needed development
costs for a new model. The down side was that Guinness would take a
majority shareholding and appoint their own chairman of the Board of
Directors, leaving Sir Kenneth as Managing Director. They also
required Corfields to produce components for the metal kegs which
they had just started to use.
Sir Kenneth soon left
the company and John was appointed Managing Director. He advised the
board that the sum they were prepared to pay for new camera
development was insufficient to restore the company's position as a
leading camera manufacturer. This was due to the technological and
cost-cutting advances that had recently been made by the Japanese
and German manufacturers.
Sadly the changing
competition from abroad now meant that the company could not
realistically compete as a camera manufacturer and so a new
direction had to be found. John went to America and negotiated a
license to manufacture and market the Prestolite range of
alternators and voltage regulators for motor vehicles.
Taken from a Corfield Prestolite leaflet.
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The leaflet on the left is worded
as follows:
Designed originally for large American
cars, the Prestolite alternator is becoming increasingly
prominent in the British commercial field because of its
superior specification. Take any similarly priced machine
and you will see that the Corfield Prestolite offers higher
rated precision bearings at both ends of a larger diameter
parallel ground shaft. The small cylindrical sliprings
increase the brush life by virtue of their lower surface
speed. The six silicon rectifiers face inwards to ensure
efficient cooling without risk of terminal contamination.
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By meeting all electrical demands
at comparatively low engine speeds, the Prestolite Alternator
prevents battery drain and subsequent damage, at the same time
maintaining full circuit voltage to improve the power of lights and
auxiliaries. Alternators are essential. Prestolite Alternators are a
luxury for which you pay no more. Full
Information on Corfield Prestolite Alternators is readily available
from any of the Simms Branches listed on this leaflet.
John continued as Managing Director for another seven
years, and finally moved back to England, having accepted the
position of CEO with an aircraft components firm that had been
losing money and needed turning around. It took him less than a year
to achieve this goal and so he moved on to become Managing Director
of an American-owned company that made and supplied switchgear
throughout Europe. After seventeen years he retired, and now lives
in Devon.
K. G. Corfield Limited
continued for another 3 years, but finally closed in July 1971.
At the end of camera
production Mr. Stanley Corfield Senior retired for a second time and
his son Stan went to Australia for a few years to be with his
children. On his return to England he also retired.
Sir Kenneth has since
had a distinguished career. When he left Northern Ireland he became
Executive Director of Parkinson Cowan and in 1967 became Executive
Assistant to the President of I.T.T. Europe. He was appointed
General Manager of the I.T.T. components group in 1968 and soon
became Vice President and Director of I.T.T. Europe. In 1970 he
became Managing Director of S.T.C. and in 1974 was elected Deputy
Chairman to the Board of S.T.C., and appointed Senior Officer for
I.T.T. U.K. He became Chairman and Chief Executive of S.T.C. in
1979. In 1980 he was awarded a Knighthood for his services to
export.
Few people have had as much of an impact as Sir
Kenneth on the British photographic industry. Thankfully he is still
involved in this area today.
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Sir Kenneth never
forgot his roots. When he found it impossible to purchase a
suitable camera for photographing buildings in a confined space,
he decided to make one. The camera is called the Architect. It
has a rising front, and uses the 6x7cm format which gives 10
exposures on a 120 roll film. It has an interchangeable back and
a 47mm f5.6 Schneider Super Angulon lens which gives a very wide
field of view. In true Corfield style this camera is now
manufactured. Sir Kenneth has again set up K. G. Corfield Ltd to
produce them. |
Sir Kenneth's involvement in the photographic industry
doesn't end there. In the early years of the last century, the
Gandolfi family started to make high quality, large format, wood and
brass cameras. These were so good that the demand for them has never
ceased. A few years ago the last two Gandolfi brothers who ran the
business, decided to retire. Sir Kenneth felt very sad that these
excellent products would no longer be available. He decided to
employ a few people to carry on repairing and building them.
Sadly Sir Kenneth passed away on 11th January, 2016
at the age of 91. He was an excellent
businessman who could always spot a gap in the market, and
knew how to fill it. His design skills were second to none. When
everyone said it couldn't be done, he went ahead and did it. He
pioneered the use of new materials such as adhesives, which are in
common use today. His management skills at Wolverhampton were first
class, and produced a happy and highly motivated workforce
Sadly many people have forgotten, or are too
young to have heard of the excellent cameras that were
made here in Wolverhampton. The people that I have spoken to
about this, who do remember Corfields, are still enthusiastic,
and fondly remember those wonderful products.
I hope that this story will help to put K. G. Corfield Ltd
back in the minds of Wolverhampton people, where it
belongs. |
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