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Digital Lifestyle
Images, Graphic Design, and Digital Photography
Canon Vs. Nikon
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<blockquote data-quote="Village Idiot" data-source="post: 1010201" data-attributes="member: 29446"><p>YAwn.</p><p></p><p>Canon introduced TTL in their bodies back in '87 through some iteration or another. Depending on how old his old film camera is, it could be an EOS body from 5-10 years back that has a flash that's capable of E-TTL operation. While alledgedly not as accurate at E-TTL II, it would still work as it's the same system. Plus most newer digital cameras I've looked up for people can handle up to 250v through their sync circuit; that's much more than the few and harder to find 12-25v or whatever it was.</p><p></p><p>And the Vivitar 285HV is made to operate at lower voltages in which those digital cameras that can't handle the higher voltages are safe. And most modern flashes that were developed after the advent of digital cameras iirc.</p><p></p><p>Facts = straight.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Village Idiot, post: 1010201, member: 29446"] YAwn. Canon introduced TTL in their bodies back in '87 through some iteration or another. Depending on how old his old film camera is, it could be an EOS body from 5-10 years back that has a flash that's capable of E-TTL operation. While alledgedly not as accurate at E-TTL II, it would still work as it's the same system. Plus most newer digital cameras I've looked up for people can handle up to 250v through their sync circuit; that's much more than the few and harder to find 12-25v or whatever it was. And the Vivitar 285HV is made to operate at lower voltages in which those digital cameras that can't handle the higher voltages are safe. And most modern flashes that were developed after the advent of digital cameras iirc. Facts = straight. [/QUOTE]
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Canon Vs. Nikon
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