Managed to acquire this beauty to add to the Marion collection
Was not sure if it was a Soho Night Reflex or not. Could only find images of one online.
It has a massive and fast Carl Zeiss 16.5/ 2 7 lens .
The Soho "Night" Reflex had a TTH Cooke 5½" f2 Series 0 lens so would have been a Quarter plate camera, in the 1926 BJP Almanac Zeiss don't list the 16.5cm f2.7 Tessar however it is fitted to two Contessa Nettel 9x12 cameras, one camer is £37-12-6 with the f2.7 Tessar an that compares to £38 for the Cooke 5½" f2 lens on its own in a similar sunken focus mount (same BJPA).
1926 is a time when fast lenses are making and impact, Ernemann sold a 9x12 camera with an f1.8 Ernostar lens, later they sold a Night reflex with a similar lens, Meyer had an f3 Anastigmat & f2 Plasmat and within a year or so an f1.5. The whole industry was in crisis which saw many mergers, the largest being the formation of Zeiss Ikon in Germany, combining Carl Zeiss, Contessa-Nettel, Goerz, Ernemann, ICA etc into Zeiss Ikon, but in the UK Ilford was taking over competitors and Marion & Co, Kershaw, Thornton Pickard, Paget etc came together as APM. My guess is in 1926/7 all the early 16.5cm f2.7 Tessars were being fitted to Zeiss made cameras.
The only images I find for a Soho Night Reflex is from an auction says it's 4.5x6cm, however as the 5½" f2 lens is for Quarter plate according to Cooke, it also ates the camera as 1906 so the listing is clearly inaccurate.
I think the use of the term Night is added by distributors/retailers when they add f2 and faster lenses, the term Speed seems to be used for f3.5 to f2.7 but these are vague advertising terms. Usually retaillers bought in cameras like these and the lenses separately as it gave greater flexibility.
The camera's a good find, the 16.5cm f2.7 Tessar is quite a sought after lens,it's one I'd like to get. I have a 165mm f6.3 & f5.3 (quite rare) so am on the look out for an f4.5, 3.5 and f2.7 (all the same FL).
Ian