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Flashbulb question

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Shootar401

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I was recently given about 240 Wabash #21 flashbulbs, the old foil filled kind. I'm having a hard time finding ANY information on these. I'd like to shoot with them eventually, but the original packaging is long gone, so each bulb was wrapped in newspaper and in a box.

I only shoot bulbs and don't even own a electronic flash so I have plenty of reference material, but these bulbs are not listed in any of them. Can anyone help out?

Thanks
 
You might contact Cress Photo (flashbulbs.com) and see what they know about these.
 
Not fimiliar

I am not familiar with the brand but I knew a guy who lit up a quarter of an aircraft carrier's flight deck at night with a few of those. They should throw out a lot of light. Sounds like fun. Good luck.
 
My Wabash flyer from October 1, 1941 only lists flashbulbs like "No. 2" (70,000 lumen seconds). A Morgan Flashguide from 1942 has G.E. and Wabash series of numbers. The Morgan Flashguide positions the Wabash No. 2 very close to the GE No. 21

I have an old GE book from 1942.

GE Mazda Synchro-Press No. 21
Voltage range: 3 to 125
Time to peak ms 20
Approx peak lumens 4,500,000
Total light output in lumen seconds 50,000 - 60,000
Color temp: 3600 degrees K
 
Those bulbs are 0-l-d. Didn't Wabash start being marketed by Sylvania sometime in the 1940s?
 
Hummm

Is a Walbash flyer anything like a Walbash Cannonball? Just wondering. I am a train nut (also).
 
My 8th Edition of the Photo Lab Index from 1946 has no mention of a #21 Wabash flash lamp. There is a listing of a #21B GE lamp. I have a few Wabash #2A bulbs. The old Wabash bulbs that I have are marked with a cardboard tag the is inside the glass "stem" of the bulb and has the name "WABASH SYLVANIA SUPERFLASH" and the number of the bulb "No. 2A"
 
Those bulbs are 0-l-d. Didn't Wabash start being marketed by Sylvania sometime in the 1940s?

Old bulbs work. After all these years they have not forgotten how to work.
 
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