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Bessa flash question

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blockend

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I have a Voigtlander Bessa L whose hotshot is occupied by a viewfinder. The side contains a standard flash socket. I want to use off camera flash via a lead, but am uncertain which type I require. I have two flashguns, a Canon FD dedicated one (199A) and a Nikon dedicated flash (Vivitar 600N), both of which I assume will fire in manual mode from the central contact (?). I need to know what type of lead has a standard circular plug on the camera end, and a hot shoe with single universal flash connector on the flash end.
 
With your PC-to-Hotshoe adapter, you know to use A1 or A2 mode, not TTL, yes?
 
Thanks again. Re the 199A, Canon flashes of the period had a unique (?) two prong camera-to-flashgun cable fitting, which I no longer have, so I'm reliant on shoe-to-PC cables of various kinds. Benjiboy, I appreciate the flash will work with any camera via the central pin, but A-series Canon's had an extra contact for TTL metering, which would not function via the Voigtlander's PC socket, obviously. Are you saying the 199A is independently automatic? I usually set the flash manually.

One question as an aside, when I use dedicated flashguns off camera via a cable (but with the appropriate camera), should I use the gun at the normal 90 degree angle with the front flash sensor pointed towards the subject, or doesn't it matter? I find it easier to use the flashgun "flat" (locked at 180 degree position) when off-camera, but fear the flash sensor is pointing in totally the wrong direction, usually toward the photographer!
 
The Canon 199A flash is not "dedicated" block end it's a bog common computer flash that will will work with any camera I suggest you try it with the Canon TTL flash lead 2 and if that doesn't work a hotshoe to cable adaptor http://www.amazon.co.uk/Hama-Hot-Sh...089&sr=8-1&keywords=hotshoe+to+cable+adaptorm and a coiled flash extention sync lead

Benjiboy is correct in everything that isn't highlighted, and nearly correct in the highlighted part.

IIRC, for some Canon bodies (AE-1, AE-1P, A-1?) the 199A would set your camera's shutter speed to the maximum synch speed, and, I think, give a "flash ready" and "auto flash worked" signal in the viewfinder for you.
 
Benjiboy is correct in everything that isn't highlighted, and nearly correct in the highlighted part.

IIRC, for some Canon bodies (AE-1, AE-1P, A-1?) the 199A would set your camera's shutter speed to the maximum synch speed, and, I think, give a "flash ready" and "auto flash worked" signal in the viewfinder for you.
That's correct.
 
Benjiboy is correct in everything that isn't highlighted, and nearly correct in the highlighted part.

IIRC, for some Canon bodies (AE-1, AE-1P, A-1?) the 199A would set your camera's shutter speed to the maximum synch speed, and, I think, give a "flash ready" and "auto flash worked" signal in the viewfinder for you.
What I meant is that it should work OK in the thyristor computer providing he has the canon sync lead for the 199A http://www.ebay.com/itm/Canon-Synch...32?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_77&hash=item4d3048783c to attach the extension cable to the Canon flash sync lead and the hot shoe to cable adaptor at the other end.
 
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