scheimfluger_77
Member
Ok, I recently had located from this forum the shutter speed tester app. and the plugin tool to go with it, but now I can't find them. Can't remember what they were called. Does anyone remember? Thank you.
Ok, I recently had located from this forum the shutter speed tester app. and the plugin tool to go with it, but now I can't find them. Can't remember what they were called. Does anyone remember? Thank you.
Yes and the one you describe in your book is awesome, I just don't have the space or time to build one myself.
I've been looking into building a shutter tester and a quick search on the web turns up many of the simple plans for the use of a phototransistor coupled with the audio input on the computer. So I went out and bought a phototransistor and hooked it up and instead of using the audio measurement technique, I looked at the actual waveform on an oscilloscope. While the pulse was present, what troubled me was the slow response time of the phototransistor. The "rise time" of the signal was nearly 5 milliseconds, and the "fall time" was even slower.
Changing the bias resistor and the supply voltage did very little to improve the signal. With these slow signals it would be difficult to resolve a shutter speed better than 1/100 with any accuracy. I think what this circuit needs is a photodiode which is much faster than a phototransistor. But it would need a pre-amp to properly capture the signal.
I'm going to research this a little more, and hopefully come up with a simple circuit that will still interface to an audio input as the measurement scheme, but as a detector will be much more precise.
All this new tech for old gear!
I think I'll stick with my old Northern Instruments optical shutter timer...... that goes from 9.999999 to 1/4000 sec.
???:confused:
I've been looking into building a shutter tester and a quick search on the web turns up many of the simple plans for the use of a phototransistor coupled with the audio input on the computer. So I went out and bought a phototransistor and hooked it up and instead of using the audio measurement technique, I looked at the actual waveform on an oscilloscope. While the pulse was present, what troubled me was the slow response time of the phototransistor. The "rise time" of the signal was nearly 5 milliseconds, and the "fall time" was even slower.
Changing the bias resistor and the supply voltage did very little to improve the signal. With these slow signals it would be difficult to resolve a shutter speed better than 1/100 with any accuracy. I think what this circuit needs is a photodiode which is much faster than a phototransistor. But it would need a pre-amp to properly capture the signal.
I'm going to research this a little more, and hopefully come up with a simple circuit that will still interface to an audio input as the measurement scheme, but as a detector will be much more precise.
How do you know what margin of error is acceptable and within the manufacturers tolerance when you've tested a shutter speed ?
It stands to reason Chan that all the shutter speeds can't be precisely the marked ones there must be a plus or minus allowable margin of error or tolerance, my engineering training tells me this.The service manual does specify theses tolerances.
How do you know what margin of error is acceptable and within the manufacturers tolerance when you've tested a shutter speed ?
It stands to reason Chan that all the shutter speeds can't be precisely the marked ones there must be a plus or minus allowable margin of error or tolerance, my engineering training tells me this.
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