Hi Alex, I'd agree with all that's written, and certainly the AF280T would be fine. If using anything else, the figure I've heard as a limit is 6v. In addition, I got this reply about a similar question from the local Pentax rep...
"Please ensure that the extra contact pins for TTL etc on the camera hotshoe do not come into contact with the centre +pin on the hot shoe adaptor or you may damage the camera." HTH Simon -----Original Message----- From: graywolf [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, 21 June 2004 7:03 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Sync voltage I think you do not have to worry with anything new enough to have TTL flash metering. What you do need to worry about are flashes that have been made for a long time like a Vivitar 283. Newish ones are OK, my old one has 250V across the sync terminals which can destroy electronic circuits in the camera. Evan my Norman 200B's are less than that at 200V. You can actually measure this with a digital volt meter which has a high enough internal resistance to no fire the flash. BTW, you do not want to use a sync cord with your flash meter on one of these either. -- Jens Bladt wrote: > How do you measure this without triggering the flash? > I often use the AF280T. Could it harm the MZ-S? > > Jens Bladt > mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt > > > -----Oprindelig meddelelse----- > Fra: Frits W�thrich [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sendt: 20. juni 2004 23:01 > Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Emne: Re: Sync voltage > > > On Saturday 19 June 2004 16:07, Alexander Selzer wrote: > FJW> Hi everybody! > FJW> > FJW> I allready search different sources but could not get a clear answer: > What > FJW> max. sync voltage is allowed with the MZ-S? > FJW> > FJW> Thanks! > FJW> Alex > FJW> > FJW> > FJW> > Don't go over 5V ever on cameras like these. > -- > Frits W�thrich > > > > -- graywolf http://graywolfphoto.com/graywolf.html

