Hasselblad
501c body + 80mm f/2.8 Planar + back/bag
Medium Format Black SLR camera body
The 501C was introduced in 1994 as an entry level camera into the Hasselblad system. The body is distinctive in several ways from the 500C/M which preceded it in that it does not have the "cocked/released" indicator window at the rear bottom of the right hand side of the body. It doesn't have a removable winding crank and has the new style (wide) shutter release.
80mm f/2.8 "new" C Planar - This is a variant of the 80CF introduced with the 501C in 1994. It is supplied with the front cap. It is different from the CF lenses in that the f-stop and shutter speed rings are not independently movable except by pressing a detent.
Film Magazine A12 - The A-12 was designed to improve the rather slow film loading procedure of the earlier versions of the magazine. There were also some complaints that film could be fogged through the viewing port on the back with fast film under very bright light. The new design (1968) addressed both these problems. A winding rank on the right side of the magazine is the obvious item that identifies the A12.