Miranda's full-aperture-metering SLR — the Sensorex, mechanical, Miranda mount, 1967.
The Miranda Sensorex was a 35mm film SLR made from 1967 by Miranda and was one of the firm's more advanced bodies. It used the Miranda mount, with its combined bayonet-and-screw design, and offered full-aperture TTL metering at a time when many rivals still used stop-down measurement.
It is a single-lens-reflex camera for 35mm film on the Miranda mount. The Sensorex used TTL metering with a mechanical linkage to convey the aperture setting to the meter, allowing full-aperture readings, and a mechanically controlled focal-plane shutter operated in metered manual. The shutter fires without a battery, which powers only the meter, and the finder prism is interchangeable.
It suits collectors and users who want a more capable Miranda with full-aperture metering and the flexibility of a removable finder. Handling is solid for its era, though the mechanical aperture linkage adds complexity compared with simpler bodies.
On the used market the Sensorex is uncommon and Miranda lenses are hard to find. Inspect the foam seals and mirror-damper foam, confirm the mechanical shutter fires across all speeds without a battery, and test the meter, which was designed for mercury cells and may read off with modern replacements. Check the prism for desilvering, verify the aperture-coupling linkage works, and note that parts and repair support are limited.