At last someone to give Cotty a run for his money...

Leon Altoff wrote:
> Mike,
>
> The unit looks a bit cobbled together, but it works fine and the AF360 
> is completely usable as a standard flash.  Here are some of the salient 
> points from when I made it.  I'm not going to take it apart to take 
> internal photos.  Like all modern electronics it's very tight and 
> delicate inside and should be played with as little as possible.
>
> Here are some quick and dirty pictures of what it looks like.
>
>  From above
> http://www.bluering.org.au/leon/flash/FrankenFlash4259.jpg
>
>  From the front
> http://www.bluering.org.au/leon/flash/FrankenFlash4260.jpg
>
> The socket on the flash
> http://www.bluering.org.au/leon/flash/FrankenFlash4263.jpg
>
> Folded up
> http://www.bluering.org.au/leon/flash/FrankenFlash4264.jpg
>
> Electronically it's easy - 3 wires and a plug and socket.  Mechanically 
> it's tight and fiddly.
>
> The second flash tube is housed in the swivel head of a very old Metz 
> flash.  I initially used the tube out of the Metz as well, but it 
> eventually killed the main flash transistor.  I now use a replacement 
> AF360 tube in the Metz housing and it's been working for about 3 years 
> with no problem.
>
> The second tube is simply wired in parallel to the first via a mini DIN 
> socket on the flash.  Do not use a headphone type socket as this shorts 
> out when being unplugged and you get a lot of sparks and mess.  The 
> wiring goes from the tube through the wiring on the opposite side to the 
> tilt locking button and to the mini DIN.  The socket is located in the 
> only place where there is any room inside the flash.  Be very careful 
> how you run the wires particularly in the head of the flash.  It needs 
> to be out of the way of the mechanism that drives the zoom.
>
> The brackets are simply whatever I could find that put things in the 
> right place.  I'll rebuild the bracket with something that looks better 
> when it breaks.
>
> The first prototype was made about 6 or 7 years ago using an AF240F 
> flash with a broken hotshoe.  It had no socket for unplugging the second 
> head and had an old hotshoe from another glued on it's side to mount 
> onto the bracket (yes the same bracket I'm still using).  I used it with 
> a Z1p and then the MZ-S before I retired it and upgraded to the AF360 to 
> use the PTTL.  This one is the second.
>
> Hope this gives you an idea, but don't blame me if anything you do kills 
> the flash.
>
>   


-- 
Entropy Seminar: The results of a five yeer studee ntu the sekend lw uf 
thurmodynamiks aand itz inevibl fxt hon shewb rt nslpn raq liot.


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