Camera Flash
I have two Nikon camera flash units that are old but working fine.
SB-24 SB-20 Need help with 1) flash shoe pinout functions? i.e. how to trigger manually through the falsh shoe? 2) how to open the units without damage to clean interior dust? 3) compatibility with Canon EOS Rebel series cameras? i.e. will not damage either if attached/used? will flash on camera shutter release. say in M or A mode? will provide TTL capability? If not compatible with Canon, then I will do the math and use a wireless radio trigger to trip. Speculations do not help. I could not find newsgroups that are more specific. If you know of any, please let me know. Thanks! |
Camera Flash
In sci.electronics.basics BeeJ wrote:
I have two Nikon camera flash units that are old but working fine. SB-24 SB-20 Need help with 1) flash shoe pinout functions? i.e. how to trigger manually through the falsh shoe? to fire the flash short the ground terminal of your hotshoe to the center pin, or use the pc sync terminal if they have them. The SB-24 does have a 3 pin terminal for sure on the side. 2) how to open the units without damage to clean interior dust? they're a real pain to to open and put back together again. It's not going to be worth the effort. You said they work fine, leave them alone. 3) compatibility with Canon EOS Rebel series cameras? no, if you just attach it to a canon. i.e. will not damage either if attached/used? no damage will flash on camera shutter release. say in M or A mode? This is questionable. With a plastic shim that insulates the other pins on the flash, you'll be OK in manual modes. will provide TTL capability? no. Canon digital bodies don't speak old-day nikon flash language. Those flashes won't work on most nikon digital camera either. If not compatible with Canon, then I will do the math and use a wireless radio trigger to trip. just use a stupid pc sync cable, or get a hot shoe to pcsync cable. this will bypass the nonsense pins that will not communicate between a century old nikon flash and a canon body. If you're comfortable with guide numbers fiddling with settings, they'll still work fine. Speculations do not help. I could not find newsgroups that are more specific. If you know of any, please let me know. Thanks! manual for the sb-20 http://www.lensinc.net/manuals/Nikon_SB-20.pdf |
Camera Flash
In sci.electronics.basics BeeJ wrote:
I have two Nikon camera flash units that are old but working fine. SB-24 SB-20 Need help with 1) flash shoe pinout functions? i.e. how to trigger manually through the falsh shoe? to fire the flash short the ground terminal of your hotshoe to the center pin, or use the pc sync terminal if they have them. The SB-24 does have a 3 pin terminal for sure on the side. 2) how to open the units without damage to clean interior dust? they're a real pain to to open and put back together again. It's not going to be worth the effort. You said they work fine, leave them alone. 3) compatibility with Canon EOS Rebel series cameras? no, if you just attach it to a canon. i.e. will not damage either if attached/used? no damage will flash on camera shutter release. say in M or A mode? This is questionable. With a plastic shim that insulates the other pins on the flash, you'll be OK in manual modes. will provide TTL capability? no. Canon digital bodies don't speak old-day nikon flash language. Those flashes won't work on most nikon digital camera either. If not compatible with Canon, then I will do the math and use a wireless radio trigger to trip. just use a stupid pc sync cable, or get a hot shoe to pcsync cable. this will bypass the nonsense pins that will not communicate between a century old nikon flash and a canon body. If you're comfortable with guide numbers fiddling with settings, they'll still work fine. Speculations do not help. I could not find newsgroups that are more specific. If you know of any, please let me know. Thanks! manual for the sb-20 http://www.lensinc.net/manuals/Nikon_SB-20.pdf Thanks for the info. I was able to clean without opening and the unts are fully functional. Is there a commercial shoe isolator that will provide the center terminal only for connection? Or do I have to build one? Any suggestions on wireless? Cowboy? |
Camera Flash
Is there a commercial shoe isolator that will provide the center
terminal only for connection? Or do I have to build one? A well-stocked photo store should have one. The shoe and central terminal connect to a short lead with a PC connector. (I bought one a few years ago.) I'd recommend covering the bottom of the shoe with two or three layers of Magic Mending Tape, then cutting out the area over the central terminal. The tape keeps the extra pins from contacting anything. |
Camera Flash
Is there a commercial shoe isolator that will provide the center
terminal only for connection? Or do I have to build one? A well-stocked photo store should have one. The shoe and central terminal connect to a short lead with a PC connector. (I bought one a few years ago.) I'd recommend covering the bottom of the shoe with two or three layers of Magic Mending Tape, then cutting out the area over the central terminal. The tape keeps the extra pins from contacting anything. Afraid of the glue goo. Maybe some thin polycarbonate. I'll look for that shoe, I think I actuall hd one at one time so it is probably in the camera cabinet. But my flash does not have the standard PC connector I think. It is a unique Nikon connector. I have a cable for it but I hate to cut it up to use it. Thanks for the input. |
Camera Flash
"BeeJ" wrote in message ... Is there a commercial shoe isolator that will provide the center terminal only for connection? Or do I have to build one? A well-stocked photo store should have one. The shoe and central terminal connect to a short lead with a PC connector. (I bought one a few years ago.) I'd recommend covering the bottom of the shoe with two or three layers of Magic Mending Tape, then cutting out the area over the central terminal. The tape keeps the extra pins from contacting anything. Afraid of the glue goo. Maybe some thin polycarbonate. I'll look for that shoe, I think I actuall hd one at one time so it is probably in the camera cabinet. But my flash does not have the standard PC connector I think. It is a unique Nikon connector. I have a cable for it but I hate to cut it up to use it. Thanks for the input. If you do manage to open it up, WATCH out, the Capacitors in those things store around 400 volts charged and even if they are discharged first, a charge will build on the capacitors afterwards. If you short them out it could damage the capacitors and will give a loud snap and a bright flash - not recommended. Discharge them with a suitable resistor. Shaun |
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