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| Sunpak 555
A powerful, professional handle mount flash with TTL flash
dedication capability (requires EXT–11 Cord, and appropriate
Sunpak dedicated module). The Auto 555 features bounce and swivel
control for creative lighting effects. A guide number of 150 with
ISO 100 film assures ample power. Auto range extends from 1.6 to 107
ft., over a 7 aperture range. In addition to TTL and auto
capability, the Auto 555 features manual flash control from full to
1/64 power. $269.99
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Phoenix 66S flash $49.99
- Small handle-mount flash has hot-shoe for your Vivitar 283 or
comparable shoe-mount flash
- Acts as slave
- 66 Guide Number (ISO 100)
- uses 4 AA cells
- Complete with bracket and cord

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Phoenix HMS-98 T flash $89.99
- 98 Guide Number (ISO 100)
- 2 heads - 1 bounce, 1 fill-in
- PC cord plus built-in slave trigger
- Zoom head covers up to 28mm WA
- uses 4 AA cells
- Complete with bracket and cord

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Phoenix 72AS flash $39.99
- Small shoe mount flash runs on AA cells
- Hot-shoe and PC cord included
- 2 automatic F-stops, with range to 18'
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| Sunpak 266AD $89.99
Sunpak makes a model 266D flash in variations that
are dedicated to provide automatic exposure with most automated,
manual focus SLR cameras. Flash will bounce off the ceiling. Zooms
in and out to cover wideangle lenses to 28mm or focus the light in a
narrow beam for telephoto and zooms, giving greater range. We've got
them to fit these models:
- Canon AE-1, AE-1 Program, A-1, AV-1, T-50, T-70, T-80,
T-90. Automatically sets both lens opening and shutter speed.
- Nikon FE, FM, N-2000, N-2020, FG, FG-20, EM. TTL metering on cameras
that have the appropriate circuitry.
- Minolta XG and XD series. Provides TTL metering when used with
X-700 or X-570, has its own sensor for all other models.
- Ricoh and Pentax and Olympus SLRs.

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Phoenix ZBIS-106 119.99
- Designed especially for today's Autofocus SLR cameras
- Infrared illuminator so the camera can focus in almost total
darkness
- Bounce and zoom head
- Full information exchange with camera for auto operation
In dedicated models to fit Nikon, Canon, Pentax and late-model
Minolta Maxxum cameras

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Pentax AF 220 T $79.99
- Features a powerful ASA 100 guide number of 92
- Provides full TTL integration including lens automatic
exposure control and automatic shutter speed confirmation
- Fully rotating, bounce flash head

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Sigma ELECTRONIC
FLASH
EF-500SUPER
to fit Sigma SA camera $249.99
This high-powerGuide Number 50/m (165ft) @ ISO 100 flash
features an auto zoom function from 28-105mm. it is equipped
with a variety of functions, including full-auto photography
with TTL auto light control, bounce and swivel flash, modeling
flash, multi-flash, TTL wireless flash. slave flash, FP
flash,and rear-curtain synch. |
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Canon 420 EX Speedlite $269.99
- Compatible with all EOS systems providing E-TTL (
Evaluative-Through-The-Lens) for most
- Can be used for wireless slave operation
- Fully rotating, bounce flash head

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Phoenix RL-59 Auto Ringlight
$199.99
- Auto TTL mode
- Guide number 59 (ISO 100)
- Powers on 4 AA batteries with a recycle time as low as .5
seconds
- Perfect for close-up photography with AF SLR's
- Dedicated models available for Nikon, Canon, Minolta, Pentax

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All about electronic Flash
Table of Contents
Electronic Flashguns use the controlled discharge of electricity in a
flash tube to make a short burst of lightning. Because the duration of
the light is short, it freezes action. It's also cheaper to use and more
convenient than disposable flash bulbs. Electronic flashguns use a
battery or other power source to charge a capacitor. When the flash is
triggered, the power in the capacitor is sent to the flash tube.
Strobe: technically, stroboscopic light is a
repeating light, such as an automotive timing light or a disco strobe.
In general usage, the phrase is used interchangeably with electronic
flash.
PC Cord: A connecting cord for the flash. Named for
the Prontor-Compur shutterworks in Germany which developed the shape of
the tip.
Hot shoe: a flash mounting slot that has a central
terminal so no cord is needed.
Synchronization: the timing of a flashgun and a
camera so that the flash is making the most light while the shutter is
open.
M Sync: a delay of .026 seconds between the flash
starting to fire and the shutter opening. This allows old flash bulbs to
reach their peak output.
X Sync: a xero (zero) delay. When the shutter is
fully open, the flash is triggered. This is what is needed for
electronic flash. Most cameras with focal plane shutters, such as SLRs,
have X sync at speeds up to 1/60th of a second. If you take a flash
picture with the shutter speed set higher than the X sync speed, you get
a picture that is partially blacked out. Some premium cameras offer the
feature of a high shutter speed for X sync. This minimizes the chance of
a "ghost exposure," one which is made not by the flash but by
the existing light.
Automatic Flash: an electronic flash that measures
the amount of light which has gone to the subject and bounced back to
the flash. It turns the flash off when enough light has been returned
for a proper exposure. It can do this in as short a period of time as
1/50,000th of a second.
With an automatic flash, the photographer sets the lens opening once,
according to a calulator built into the flash gun. For example, the
flash may show that with ISO 200 film, the lens should be set to f8. At
all distances up to the maximum range of the flash, the flash will
measure light returning from the subject and turn itself off when just
enough light has been returned for a proper exposure at f8. The concept
is similar to that of a toilet mechanism, which fills itself to a
present level and then stops the flow.
Early and lower-cost automatic flash guns used a simple switching
mechanism. Initially power from the capacitor goes to the flash tube.
When the "brain" of the flash decides there's been enough
light generated, the remaining power from the capacitor is diverted to a
dump tube, which wastes it.
Thyristor: a special type of switching mechanism on
an automatic flash which saves the energy not required during a short
flash. It simply stops the flow of power from the capacitor to the flash
tube, instead of wasting it by "dumping" it. This means that a
thyristorized flash gun will recycle more quickly and give more flashes
on a set of batteries before they run down.
Recycle Time: how long you must wait after one flash
before the flash is ready again. With a thyristorized flash the
following choices make the flash recycle faster:
- Fresh batteries (or rechargeables)
- Close distance
- Large lens opening
A TTL flash system uses a sensor in the camera to
measure the flash Thru The Lens, which is more accurate when taking
extreme closeups or using a long lens.
Dedicated flashguns are designed to work with a
specific late model camera or family of cameras. They have additional
connectors to carry information back and forth between the camera's
brain (CPU or Central Processing Unit) and the flash. All dedicated
flashguns set the camera to the one and only proper shutter speed for
flash sync. Some also set the lens opening, on cameras which have
automatic lens opening exposure systems. Most activate a flash
readilight in the camera's viewfinder. Older cameras with mechanically
timed shutters don't need, and can't take advantage of a dedicated
flash.
Multi-dedicated flashguns by companies such
asVivitar, Sunpak, Rokunar, Achiever, etc, can be adjusted to provide
minimal dedication with several different brand cameras. In general,
they will set the proper shutter speed, activate the readilight in the
viewfinder, but will not set the lens opening.
Some flashguns, such as the Minolta 280PX, do not have a built-in
exposure sensor. They can only be used on specific cameras that have a
built-in sensor for TTL flash. For example, the Minolta 280PX can only
be used on the X-570 and X-700 cameras.
Autofocus cameras usually have full dedication and also a built-in
near-infrared light source that makes it easier for the camera to focus
in low light levels. Failure to use a fully-dedicated flash wipes out
many of the benefits of buying such a good camera.
Return to Table of Contents
Guide Number: As you get farther away from any light
source, the intensity drops off. As you change the f stop of a lens, the
intensity of the light at the film plane also changes. They change at
the same rate, so this statement is always true: distance times f stop =
a fixed number (called the Guide Number) Every combination of flash and
film speed has one Guide Number (GN). Faster films and more powerful
flashguns have higher guide numbers. Often manufacturers use the GN as
part of the model name of a flashgun.
- Rokunar SP920 has a 92GN
- Rokunar 100 has a 100GN
- Rokunar 147 has a 147GN
You figure out what f stop to use by dividing the guide number by the
distance from the flash to the subject.
If a flashgun has a guide number of 80,
- at 10 feet use f8 (80 divided by 10 = 8)
- at 5 feet use f16 (80 divided by 5=16)
- at 20 feet use f4 (80 divided by 20=4)
When the film speed is increased by a factor of 4, the guide number
is doubled. If the guide number for ISO 100 was 80, the GN for ISO 400
is 160.
How film speed changes Guide Number
| Film speed: |
Guide Number |
| 25 |
40 |
| 50 |
56 |
| 100 |
80 |
| 200 |
110 |
| 400 |
160 |
Does that progression of guide numbers remind you of anything? The
increase as film speeds double is just like the 1.4 times increase in
the f-stop numbers on your lens:
Guide numbers can also be rated in meters rather than feet, but
manufacturers don't do that too much in the USA - it makes their
products seem less powerful.
Return to Table of Contents
What shutter speed can I use?
If the light from a flash picture is to get to all of the film, then
all the negative area must be uncovered when the flash goes off. With a
focal plane shutter, at high shutter speeds only a portion of the
negative is uncovered at any instant - a slit exposes each segment
sequentially. That's the reason you'll sometimes see a photo properly
exposed at one end and very dark at the other.
Some top-end cameras can be used with special flashguns at really
high shutter speeds such as 1/4000th of a second. The special flash
actually lasts long enough for the shutter curtain to complete its
passage across the full length of the film.
Most cameras require that you use a slower shutter speed. On some,
the highest shutter speed that is usuable with electronic flash will be
painted a different color on the shutter speed dial, or marked with an
"X."
Here's a rough guide to camera types and the highest shutter speed
for flash sync (a slower speed is always safer)
- Old 35mm rangefinder cameras with cloth shutter curtains (Leica
screw mount, Exacta, etc) 1/25th or 1/30th second
- More modern 35mm with cloth or horizontal metal curtains (Leica
M-series, Canon VI, Nikon F, Pentax Spotmatic, Minolta SRT-series)
1/50th or 1/60th
- 35mm SLR with metal shutter which moves vertically (Nikkormat,
Konica T series, etc) : 1/125th second
- Leaf shutter cameras (the shutter is in the middle of the lens)
such as Rolleiflex TLR, Kodak Retina: any speed up to 1/500th
Return to Table of Contents
What fits what:
Minolta
- SRT, SR, and older mechanical models: do not require dedicated
flash
- XD, XG, X-370, X-9 dedicated flash for shutter speed only - will
not set lens opening automatically
- X-570 Can accept flash with TTL metering. Will not set lens
opening automatically, but when using a TTL flash it is not
necessary to set any specific lens opening. Larger lens openings
make for greater operating range.
- X-700 Can accept flash with TTL metering. Sets lens opening
automatically. When using a TTL flash it is not necessary to set any
specific lens opening. Lens may be set at P and will set
automatically.
- Maxxum 5000, 7000, 9000 have an "ordinary" shoe shape.
This is the 1st generation Maxxum. Use original series (Minolta
1800, 2800, 4000AF) or independents such as Achiever 260AF.
- Maxxum 3000i - Any Minolta i series flash. The 314i and 316i flash
are for these models only - they run off the battery in the camera. Many
independent models will not work with a 3000i.
- Maxxum Xi cameras: Minolta or other i or xi flash. Can set
everything.
- 300si, 400si, 700si - any Minolta si flash. Also, Sunpak 355AF.
Canon
- FT, FT-b, Auto Canonflex do not require dedicated flash
- AE-1, AE-1 Program, T-50, T-70, T-80, T-90 Use the OEM flash, such
as 133 -155 - 188 - 199, or independent dedicated flash that will
set lens opening too, such as Sunpak 266D.
- AV-1, AT-1, AL-1 Dedicated flash that sets shutter speed, but
photographer must set lens opening.
- Can use either fully-dedicated units like Sunpak 266 or Vivitar
550
Nikon
- F, F2, Nikkormat (except EL), and older mechanical models: do not
require dedicated flash
- Nikkormat EL, Nikon ELW, FE, FE-2 dedicated flash for shutter
speed only - will not set lens opening automatically
- Nikon FM, F2 Accept a dedicated flash but all it does is show a
readylight in the viewfinder.
- Nikon EM, FG20: Can accept flash with TTL metering. Will not set
lens opening automatically, but when using a TTL flash it is not
necessary to set any specific lens opening. Larger lens openings
give greater maximum range, faster recycling.
- FG, 2000, 2020, F3:, F4, F5: Can accept flash with TTL metering.
Sets lens opening automatically. When using a TTL flash it is not
necessary to set any specific lens opening. Lens may be set at P and
will set automatically.
Which flash is needed: (Most cameras will work with
all lower levels of dedication, they just won't give you all the
features of the more sophisticated dedication system.) The specific
models listed are for illustration only, this does not represent a
specific endorsement..
A: non-dedicated
- Rokunar AR14, AR18
- Achiever 115, 260T
- Sunpak 144, 383
- Nissan 4200
- \Vivitar 283, 285
B: dedicated, shutter speed only
- most "multidedicated" flashguns
C: dedicated, shutter & f-stop
- Sunpak 266 for Canon
- Achiever 632 LCD
D: dedicated, TTL or Program
- Sunpak 266
- Minolta 280
- Ricoh 260
- Nikon SB-E
E: Autofocus special flash
- Manufacturer's own
- Rokunar MX382, 800T
- Sunpak 355AF, 433AF, PZ 4000AF
- Achiever 260AF
- Vivitar 636AF (check for specific model)
Canon
- FT, FTb, TL A
- AL-1, AV-1, AT-1 B
- AE-1, AE-1 Program, A-1 C
- T-50, T-70, T-90 C
- EOS E
Minolta
- SRT-100, 101, 102, 200, 201, 202 A
- XG-1, XG-7, XG-9 B
- X-370, X7, X9, XE, XD B
- X-570 B or D (TTL flash capability - not program)
- X-700 D
- Maxxum E
Nikon
- F, F2 A
- EL, FE B
- FM A or B - will show readilight in VF with B
- FG D
- FG20, EM B or D (TTL flash capability - not program)
Olympus
- OM-1 A
- OM-1n A or B - will show readilight in VF with B
- OM-2, OM-10, OM-G B
- OM-2n, OM-3, OM-4 D
- OM-77 E
Pentax
- All thread-mount models A
- K-1000, KM A
- ME, MV, MV-1 B or Pentax AF-160
- Super Program, Program Plus C or Pentax AF-160Sa
Ricoh
- All thread-mount models A
- KR-5 A
- KR-5 Super A or B - will show readilight in VF with B
- KR-10, KR-30 B
- XR C
Specific Flash Recommendations
Canon
- FT, FTb, TL Sunpak 144 PC, Vivitar 283, Nistar M160
- AL-1, AV-1, AT-1 Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D
- AE-1, AE-1 Program, A-1 Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D
- T-50, T-70, T-90 Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D,
- EOS Achiever 260AF, Rokunar 800, Sunpak 433AF, Sunpak 355AF
Minolta
- SRT-100, 101, 102, 200, 201, 202 Sunpak 144 PC, Vivitar 283,
Nistar M160
- XG-1, XG-7, XG-9 Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D
- X-370, X7, X9, XE, XD Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D
- X-570 Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D
- X-700 Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D
- Maxxum 5000, 7000, 9000 Achiever 260AF, Rokunar 800, Sunpak 433AF
- Maxxum 5000i, 7000i, 8000i Achiever 260AF, Rokunar 800, Sunpak
355AF
- Maxxum 3000i OEM or Sunpak 355AF - no other!
- Maxxum 300si, 400si, 700si Achiever 260AF, Rokunar 800, Sunpak
355AF
Nikon
- F, F2 Sunpak 144 PC, Vivitar 283, Nistar M160
- EL, FE, F3 Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D
- FM Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D doesn't dedicate, but shows redilite
in VF
- EM, FG, FG20 Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D
- 2000, 2020, 4004, 5005, 8008 Sunpak 355AF
- F-4, N-50, N-90 Sunpak 355AF
Olympus
- OM-1 Sunpak 144 PC, Vivitar 283, Nistar M160
- OM-1n Sunpak 144 PC, Vivitar 283, Nistar M160
- OM-2, OM-10, OM-G Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D
- OM-2n, OM-3, OM-4 Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D
- OM-77 special - grip flash from Olympus
-
Pentax
- All thread-mount models Sunpak 144 PC, Vivitar 283, Nistar M160
- K-1000, KM Sunpak 144 PC, Vivitar 283, Nistar M160
- ME, MV, MV-1 Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D
- Super Program, Program + Sunpak 266D, Achiever 260D, Pentax
AF-160Sa
Ricoh
- All thread-mount models Sunpak 144 PC, Vivitar 283, Nistar M160
- KR-5, KR-5 Super Sunpak 144 PC, Vivitar 283, Nistar M160
- KR-10, KR-30 Sunpak 266D, Ricoh 260
- XR Sunpak 266D, Ricoh 260
- XR-M Special end mount flash from Ricoh or or use Sunpak 266D,
Ricoh 260
Getting the flash up and away from the camera is the best way to add a
third dimension to your pictures. The light from above and the side
"models" the planes of the face, and just about totally eliminates
the chance of red eyes.
Canon
makes an off-camera cord that has a dedicated foot at one end, and a dedicated
shoe at the other. It transfers the information from the brain of the camera
to the brain of the flash gun. In the illustration here, I've hooked up a
Sunpak 266D flash to a Canon AE-1 camera. The small tripod is for illustrative
purposes only. The part that the flash slides into has a foot at the bottom,
so that you can mount it on a flash bracket, and also has a 1/4-20 thread for
mount on tripods or light stands. (Click on the photo for a larger
image)
While this cord is specifically designed for the Canon EOS autofocus
cameras, our tests show it works perfectly with the A-series cameras and the
T-series cameras. It provides full dedicated operation with the Canon Digital
Pro90IS and D-30 cameras.
It would also work with any other hot-shoe camera that doesn't have
dedicated circuitry. One of my customers is using it with an Olympus E-10, but
I don't guaranty it for dedicated operation with anything other than Canon.
Here's
a close-up of the cord itself. (Click on the photo for a larger image) Canon
Off Camera Cord 2 Our price $64.99

Chris' Camera Center, South
150A Laurens Street SW
Aiken, South Carolina
803 641-0501 e-mail us
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