Here's a simple and cheap way to field test your X-synch on Bronicas and other cameras! |
How can you easily and cheaply tell if your electronic flash fires at
the correct "X" synchronization?
Take a piece if phosphorescent glowing tape (sold at theatrical supply
houses
or through the Set Shop in NYC) and fill a 3x5 card with the light
sensitive
tape. Then, with the camera back off or open hold the taped paper against the
shutter gate on the film path. (Don't press too hard or you will interfere
with the shutter when it fires)
Set your shutter speed to the highest that your camera will synch. (1/125
or 1/250 or whatever). Now point the camera without a lens towards the
flash
and fire.
Quickly look at the card. The full rectangle of the film gate should be
glowing on the card. If it is a narrow rectangle then you are not synching
properly. This is a wonderful field trick and it really works.
[email protected] (Gary Gladstone)
Related Posting from the Bronica List:
Date: Mon, 09 Aug 1999
From: geoff/camera tech [email protected]
Subject: Re: [BRONICA]
>How do you check the flash sync in the Bronica etr and SQ-ai cameras? >----- Original Message ----- >From: budd gottesman [email protected]
Take the back off your camera, mount lens to body, set body for double
exposure, plug flash in, turn flash on, using a white piece of paper point
the flash towards the paper and the camera lens, look through the back of
the camera as you fire the shutter with aperture set wide open, you should
see a full white disc of light. If not your flash is not syncing properly.
Works the same for all Bronica formats.
Best regards,
geoff/camera tech
2308 Taraval St. S.F.,CA 94116 USA
UNDERWATER PHOTO/VIDEO SALES-REPAIRS-RENTALS
Bronica western regional factory service center
(415)242-1700 Fax (415)242-1719
email: [email protected] web site: http://www.cameratech.com
Date: Mon, 9 Aug 1999
From: budd gottesman [email protected]
Subject: [BRONICA] checking sync
The previous posting on checking sync is right on.
You don't need the piece of white paper, though.
Point the camerea w/ flash toward anything close by,
(wall, ceiling, floor, etc.). With the camera set to
multi exposure, back open (off, or with insert
removed, etc.), with the diaphragm open, and flash on
and ready to fire; fire the camera while looking thru
the back (in essence, your eye is replacing the film).
If you see the full circle of light then so would the
film. The thing that I don't think was mentioned was
that I would normally do this check at at least
1/250th of a second and usually at 1/500th. If it
syncs right at the fastest speeds, it's very likely to
work right at slower ones. REMEMBER, you're checking
to see that the shutter opens, flash fires, shutter
closes; (IN EXACTLY THAT ORDER, ONLY). Any other
order, you'd see no light (and neither would the
film); and you're saved if its before the job...or
you're dead if it's after....make your choice...you
can/should do this at the beginning (before shooting)
AT EVERY JOB, and at film changes every so often
during a shoot ...just remove the shot (finished) roll
of film, check sync and put in new the roll. (all of 2
seconds) or gamble...it's part of being a 'pro'.
Budd
From Rollei Mailing List:
Date: Wed, 19 Jan 2000
From: Bob Shell [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Rollei] Flash Synch
Sure. Just open the back of the camera, point the camera and flash at a
white wall with the lens aperture wide open and fire the shutter. If you
see the flash it is set to X, if you don't it is set to M.
Bob
>> Is there an easy way to determine whether the flash synch on my Automat MX >> is set to "M" or "X," other than the position of the little synch lever on >> the front of the camera (and short of shooting and developing a test roll)? >> The lever has become loose and spins freely. I can get it to engage >> intermittently by applying pressure to the pin holding it in place, but >> this process does not leave me confident about the actual setting....