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Battery–capacitor flash

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Polaroid BC flash model 281

A battery–capacitor flash (BC flash) is a flash photography system used with flashbulbs. Instead of relying directly on the current pulse ability of a photoflash battery to directly fire a flashbulb, a battery is used to charge a capacitor that is then discharged through the flashbulb. BC flash units use 5.6 V, 15 V, or 22½ V batteries.

Advantages

A special high-current photoflash battery is not needed, and even an ageing battery can charge the capacitor, although recycling more slowly than a fresh one;[1] the charged capacitor delivers a high-current pulse and reliably fires the bulb.

References

  1. ^ Nikon Flash Unit BC-7 Instruction Manual (PDF)
  • Electronics for Photographers, by Marshall Lincoln, Copyright 1966 by Chilton Books, pp 43–54.
  • Capacitors & Batteries, Boston University Physics Department


This page was last edited on 1 May 2023, at 17:23
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