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Olympus XA - sync speed

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baachitraka

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I see there is a setting for ISO on the flash and flipping the slider to flash actually turns on the flash and so on...

Now, I wonder what is the sync speed when flash is turned on?
 
Flash sync is rather slow, around 1/30s.
 
I presume the aperture when flash is on is also like f/4?
 
that's a bit slow...

It’s slower than a Leica at 1/50… but that’s just because Olympus is syncing with perfection, not just the flash!
 
I think, it's still okay. Flash fires perhaps for very shorter times and that I could also use to trigger the optical triggers to fire much powerful flash.

Nevertheless, XA shines in street photography and handy in house parties.
 
Fascinating question, and it does surprise me it hasn't been asked before.
In my kit I have held on to my Olympus XA and flash since it was first bought back in 1982!
 
Fascinating question, and it does surprise me it hasn't been asked before.
In my kit I have held on to my Olympus XA and flash since it was first bought back in 1982!

I was just curious since aperture was opening is approximately f/4 and I was curious about the sync speed.

XA got leaf shutter and I was kind of expected something faster...
 
The Olympus XA, when put into the Flash mode and used with the A11 flash, defaults to f/4 and about 1/30 (I read somewhere that its shutter in Flash mode is 1/40). You CAN use the XA with an external flash unit and set aperture and shutter speed (not use Flash mode), and its leaf shutter would permit flash synch up to about 1/500 (the shutter can fire at 1/750, but whether or not you can use that speed with flash is another matter).
 
The Olympus XA, when put into the Flash mode and used with the A11 flash, defaults to f/4 and about 1/30 (I read somewhere that its shutter in Flash mode is 1/40). You CAN use the XA with an external flash unit and set aperture and shutter speed (not use Flash mode), and its leaf shutter would permit flash synch up to about 1/500 (the shutter can fire at 1/750, but whether or not you can use that speed with flash is another matter).
How can I use the XA with an external flash unit?
 
You CAN use the XA with an external flash unit

I would like to see an actual example of this. I have the XA beside me and I can see three ports, one of which is the screw-in orifice, with a tiny recessed pin at the top and a 2-pin port below. So how is an external flash hooked up without potential damage to the camera itself (e.g. trigger voltage)?
 
I would like to see an actual example of this. I have the XA beside me and I can see three ports, one of which is the screw-in orifice, with a tiny recessed pin at the top and a 2-pin port below. So how is an external flash hooked up without potential damage to the camera itself (e.g. trigger voltage)?
I wonder about the same but we may use the optical triggers to trigger the external flash.
 
I would like to see an actual example of this. I have the XA beside me and I can see three ports, one of which is the screw-in orifice, with a tiny recessed pin at the top and a 2-pin port below. So how is an external flash hooked up without potential damage to the camera itself (e.g. trigger voltage)?

Trigger voltage issue arose only when camera manufacturers designed in electronic circuits rather than mechanical contacts to trigger flash...in 1979 this was not yet an issue; the standard of 24V for digital circuit controlleed flash did not occur until about 1992.
In another reply I already admitted to overlooking the absence of a PC flash sync port.
 
I would like to see an actual example of this. I have the XA beside me and I can see three ports, one of which is the screw-in orifice, with a tiny recessed pin at the top and a 2-pin port below. So how is an external flash hooked up without potential damage to the camera itself (e.g. trigger voltage)?

I tried to modify an A11 flash to get the sync contact but was unsuccessful.
 
You can sync the flash optically and if you don't want any light from the A11/A16 you can put the optical slave sensor right at the A11 flash tube and cover it up. You can set the aperture at any aperture and it would still work. The problem is mainly to get a decent shutter speed because when you use flash it's dark and even if you set the ISO to 800 (while having ISO 100 film inside) you don't really gain much in term of shutter speed. I was thinking of putting a small LED where the light sensor is to get the shutter speed up higher.
However, if I were to use the A11/A16 flash the 1/30 sync speed doesn't bother me. It's the f/4 aperture that does. I prefer f/8 or f/5.6.
 
If it could trigger the external flash, then the external flash duration is typically 1/400 - 1/1000 and that could freeze the subject even when shutter is firing only 1/40.
 
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