Experiences with Olympus T20 flash

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Selidor

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Hi everybody, I used a T20 flash for the first time last week, and Im just wondering if my experiences were typical.

First off I put new batteries in and shot half a roll of random things around the house, to gauge how much exposure compensation I needed. Olympus say in the T20 instruction manual that between -1 and -2 stops are necessary to prevent the subject "whiting out" when the background is dark. Overall I found the sweet spot to be at -1 1/3; I used HP5+.

With this in mind, and some T-Max 400 in my pocket, I go to a friend's house party at the weekend. I slowly shoot 1 & 3/4 rolls over the course of around 8 hours, and everything seems fine until I go to take 2 shots in quick succession near the beginning of the 2nd roll, when I realize the recharge time is nearly 60 seconds, when it had been 2-4 previously. Even using f/22 once on the test roll hadnt made it charge longer than about 7-10 seconds - I stuck firmly to around f/4 on the night as recommended by the T20 manual.

Looking at the developed negatives, most of the entire second roll and some the last 10 frames of the first are very faint. Fortunately I could save quite a few thanks to Adobe Lightroom, and I suppose because T-Max 400 (II) doesnt need extra development when rated at ISO 800.

Im assuming the batteries went low on power after, say 40 shots and created the very long recharge times and underexposure, am I correct? Is this normal efficiency for an T20? My Nikon SB15 (and to some extent the SB24) seems to go on forever.

The frames that were exposed properly came out nicely btw. However my Hotshoe shattered dramatically (common, I know) at 4am. I considered sticking around until dawn for more light... :laugh:
 

baachitraka

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If you can afford, go for T32. Quite powerful has bounce capabilities. My prints came really good with Zuiko 85mm. I paid around 30 euros for T32.
 

Rick A

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Recharge time varies with power output. If your first shot required 100% of the charge then the recharge time would be long. It also depends on the state of charge remaining in the batteries. The weaker the cells, the longer it takes to recharge the flash. I always carry an extra set of batteries, and never store the flash with batteries in.
 

mgb74

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FYI, your T20 says "no ni-cads" (at least mine did). Believe it. Don't ask me how I know.
 

MattKing

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What batteries were you using?

The T20 only has room for two AA batteries, so if you use it for a lot of full power flashes the batteries can get used up fairly quickly.

Were you using the flash on your OM-2n? If so, which way round did you have the distance plate installed in the flash?
 
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Selidor

Selidor

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I looked into the the T32 when I was in the market for a flash, but it seemed huge in comparison to the OM-2n. The T20 seemed much more compact and portable, so I thought I'd see how that worked out.
Recharge time varies with power output. If your first shot required 100% of the charge then the recharge time would be long
But it was taking a minute with every single shot. All photographs were indoors, small white walled rooms lit by single fluorescent bulbs.
I always carry an extra set of batteries
I should have really, but I (naively perhaps) thought it would perform no differently from my SB-15, that I used in the same house.
FYI, your T20 says "no ni-cads"
If i ever somehow come across ni-cads, Ill keep that in mind :smile:
What batteries were you using?
I was using Duracell Plus, which I think is just the standard Duracells' now... Yeah it was my OM-2n and the distance plate was installed facing away from me, so just the plain side was exposed. But the text "full automatic control by OM-2" wasn't there, rubbed off maybe.
 

wblynch

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I think it would be a mistake to mount a T-32 on an OM-1 or OM-2 with their fragile flash shoes.

The T-20 even makes me nervous.
 

MattKing

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I think it would be a mistake to mount a T-32 on an OM-1 or OM-2 with their fragile flash shoes.

The T-20 even makes me nervous.

I've used a T-32 on OM-1 and OM-2n bodies for decades.

I've never had problems with the OM-1 shoe. As for the OM-2n, once they are cracked, I don't worry about them as much:confused:
 
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But it was taking a minute with every single shot. All photographs were indoors, small white walled rooms lit by single fluorescent bulbs.

I was using Duracell Plus, which I think is just the standard Duracells' now... Yeah it was my OM-2n and the distance plate was installed facing away from me, so just the plain side was exposed. But the text "full automatic control by OM-2" wasn't there, rubbed off maybe.

When the plate is set this way, the slider is pushed all the way over to "manual" which is OTF auto control. Camera on "auto". If you're far enough away or trying to use small aperture, flash will go full dump every time. A one minute recycle would indicate at least flash is oldest style (long recycle) circuit, or a defect (bad resistor & diode). Full recycle with the best batteries should only be 10-15 seconds. John
 
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