Fiber-Optic Cable Trick Brings Remote Triggering to Older Flashes

Posted by Jason Fitzpatrick on How to geek See other posts from How to geek or by Jason Fitzpatrick
Published on Fri, 15 Jun 2012 15:00:21 GMT Indexed on 2012/06/15 21:20 UTC
Read the original article Hit count: 396

Filed under:
|
|

Many older flashes lack for a jack to input a sync cable and rely exclusively on a simple slave mode triggered by the primary flash. This hack uses a piece of scrap fiber optic cable to trigger the flash in bright conditions.

Using a flash as an optical slave indoors isn’t much of a problem, but if you introduce bright light (such as outdoor lighting conditions), the ambient light can overpower the small on-camera flash and render the optical slave function useless. To overcome this, Marcell over at Fiber Strobe (a blog dedicated to cataloging experiments in incorporating fiber optics into photography) came up with a simple work around. By using some foam crafting materials and tape, he whipped up a simple mount for a strand of scrap fiber optic cable to connect between the on-camera flash and the sensor on the slave flash. Once attached it works exactly like as sync cable would, except it’s transmitting a pulse of light instead of a pulse of electricity.

Hit up the link below for more pictures and a build guide.

DIY Fiber Sync Cord [via DIY Photography]

HTG Explains: What Is Windows RT and What Does It Mean To Me?
HTG Explains: How Windows 8′s Secure Boot Feature Works & What It Means for Linux
Hack Your Kindle for Easy Font Customization


© How to geek or respective owner

Related posts about photography

Related posts about News