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Question regarding Yashica A Camera with Sunpak 555 Flash
I recently was given a Yashica A Camera with a Sunpak 555 Flash Unit.
My question is what shutter speed setting do I use when using the flash unit. I seem to remember the correct setting was 1/60 of a second. I have searched on line for an owner's manual for the flash unit, but no luck. Somebody tell me if I am correct with the 1/60 setting. --- avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 080303-0, 03/03/2008 Tested on: 3/3/2008 5:42:28 PM avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2008 ALWIL Software. http://www.avast.com |
#2
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Question regarding Yashica A Camera with Sunpak 555 Flash
In article ,
Roy wrote: I recently was given a Yashica A Camera with a Sunpak 555 Flash Unit. My question is what shutter speed setting do I use when using the flash unit. I seem to remember the correct setting was 1/60 of a second. I have searched on line for an owner's manual for the flash unit, but no luck. Somebody tell me if I am correct with the 1/60 setting. --- avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 080303-0, 03/03/2008 Tested on: 3/3/2008 5:42:28 PM avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2008 ALWIL Software. http://www.avast.com Typically you can use any shutter speed slower than the upper limit, 1/60th sounds about right as the upper limit. -- Reality is a picture perfected and never looking back. |
#3
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Question regarding Yashica A Camera with Sunpak 555 Flash
"Roy" wrote in message .70... I recently was given a Yashica A Camera with a Sunpak 555 Flash Unit. My question is what shutter speed setting do I use when using the flash unit. I seem to remember the correct setting was 1/60 of a second. I have searched on line for an owner's manual for the flash unit, but no luck. Somebody tell me if I am correct with the 1/60 setting. 1/60 sec or slower is correct if your camera has a focal plane shutter. But your Yashica A - like all TLRs - has a leaf shutter. So just make sure you have the camera at X-synch and fire away at any and all speeds with your Sunpak electronic flash. It is easy enough to test - put a roll in the camera, set the synch to X, and fire away varying the shutter speed....no exposure compensation using the f/stop. The different shutter speeds have no effect on exposure when ambient light is low/non existent...exposure is controlled by f/stop/subject distance as indicated by info on your flash. |
#4
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Question regarding Yashica A Camera with Sunpak 555 Flash
"Roy" wrote in message .70... I recently was given a Yashica A Camera with a Sunpak 555 Flash Unit. My question is what shutter speed setting do I use when using the flash unit. I seem to remember the correct setting was 1/60 of a second. I have searched on line for an owner's manual for the flash unit, but no luck. Somebody tell me if I am correct with the 1/60 setting. --- avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 080303-0, 03/03/2008 Tested on: 3/3/2008 5:42:28 PM avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2008 ALWIL Software. http://www.avast.com I don't know the Yashica A, but for most horizontal focal plane shutters, 1/60 is maximum. If the pictures have one side cut off, then it's longer than 1/60. If it's a between-the-lens shutter, just about any speed is good. (The preceding is a _general_ statement that applies to many 35mm cameras, and possibly MF cameras.) Is this a MF twin lens reflex? if so, try http://www.butkus.org/chinon/yashica...a_a-splash.htm. For many camera instruction books, try the first part of that URL--http://www.butkus.org/ |
#5
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Question regarding Yashica A Camera with Sunpak 555 Flash
Thanks all. I used a Yashica A with an older flash unit and then a Sunpak
555 when they were introduced to take many accident scene photographs up until 1983 when the department switched to 35 mm. Our Physical Evidence Section also used them and they were excellent for both black and white and color photographs, especially when enlarged for court presentation. I can only imagine now they have gone to digital which at first caused many court battles over the admissibility of the photos as evidence due to the very simple procedure to alter them. An antique camera for an antigue operator------------ --- avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 080304-0, 03/04/2008 Tested on: 3/4/2008 5:58:16 AM avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2008 ALWIL Software. http://www.avast.com |
#6
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Question regarding Yashica A Camera with Sunpak 555 Flash
Roy wrote:
I recently was given a Yashica A Camera with a Sunpak 555 Flash Unit. My question is what shutter speed setting do I use when using the flash unit. I seem to remember the correct setting was 1/60 of a second. I have searched on line for an owner's manual for the flash unit, but no luck. Somebody tell me if I am correct with the 1/60 setting. You're not incorrect with 1/60th, but Yashica A cameras have leaf shutters so you should be good to go as fast as the lens shutter will go. -- -- r.p.e.35mm user resource: http://www.aliasimages.com/rpe35mmur.htm -- r.p.d.slr-systems: http://www.aliasimages.com/rpdslrsysur.htm -- [SI] gallery & rulz: http://www.pbase.com/shootin -- e-meil: Remove FreeLunch. |
#7
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Question regarding Yashica A Camera with Sunpak 555 Flash
My question is what shutter speed setting do I use when using the flash
unit. You can use any shutter speed, up to the camera's maximum speed of 1/300 of a second. The Yashica-A was my first camera, which I was given at age 9, along with a Sekonic "Brockway" exposure meter. It has been awhile since I used it, and I do not recall if there was an "X" synchronization setting. The camera came out circa 1958. Were there any electronic flash units available then? I don't think I ever used a flash unit with my camera--all my shots with it were taken in daylight. The irony of this is that, even after I migrated to 35mm photography, I typically used the 50mm normal lens for about 90 percent of my work (I shoot landscapes, street scenes and buildings that are about to be demolished--my little way of preserving the past). The 80mm normal lens on the "A" might have been an impediment to some, but I could have gotten by with that camera and lens for decades, and would have been quite happy with the results. Even that non-coated lens yields more image quality than the best 35mm, because of the greater film size. It might not be the best choice for action photos, where automatic exposure and faster film advance are real advantages, but for more static subjects it remains a fine piece of equipment. Enjoy it! |
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