I was recently looking for potential replacement capacitors for my Honeywell Tilt-A-Mite flash unit and stumbled across this fascinating thread. I’ve read through all of the comments that have been posted here over the past five years and feel that I might have something to contribute to help settle a number of unresolved questions that still linger.
I’m certainly not an expert or an authority on these questions; however, I’m an avid user of flashbulbs and have amassed a number of authoritative texts over the years that can help put many of these questions to rest. For reference, my primary texts are:
Flash Photography; Arnold, Rus; 1940
Flash for Better Photography; Bouie, Bill; 1956
Beginner’s Guide To Flash Photography; Harris, Percy; 1964
I also have a variety of original flash manuals from the 1930s up to the 1960s for many of the flashbulb units that I own and use—some information comes from original camera manuals as well, which often include flash instructions for the flash units that accompany the cameras.
Question 1: Are there flashbulb units that do not use capacitors?
This question has more-or-less been answered here, but I can state pretty emphatically that there are DEFINITELY many flashbulb units that do not use capacitors. All flashbulb units from the late ‘30s to the late ‘40s did not include capacitors. “B-C” units were first introduced in the early ‘50s (“B-C” stands for “Battery-Capacitor”, or sometimes, rarely, “Battery-Condenser”). Many common flash units from the ‘50s were actually designed to function on either regular batteries or special B-C packs. The ubiquitous Kodak “Flasholder” series of flash units could accept either a pair of 1.5V C cells or a Kodak B-C pack that was the same size as two C cells but was comprised of a large capacitor and a space to hold a 22.5V battery. The popular Heiland Synchro-Mite used an almost identical system—this was the technological predecessor to the Honeywell Tilt-A-Mite, after Honeywell purchased the Heiland Corporation.
In the late ‘50s the Mallory battery company (which became Duracell) even sold special B-C “conversion units” that were the same size as common battery configurations, which could be used in any non-capacitor flash unit. These units allowed owners of flash units whose manufacturers did not offer a factory B-C option the ability to take advantage of a B-C power source.
Question 2: Why does the Tilt-A-Mite have a capacitor?
The main question that started this whole chain! Various different opinions have been offered in the past five years about the relationships between batteries, capacitors, voltages, currents, etc. To answer this question you have to understand the relationship between battery-only flash units and B-C flash units during the transition period of the mid-‘50s to the early ‘60s. That was the period during which the use of batteries only or B-C units was at its peak. There were advantages and disadvantages to each at that time.
Battery-only advantages:
- Batteries were relatively cheap and very easy to purchase almost anywhere
- Battery circuits are incredibly simple and more servicable
- Batteries can be used with solenoid synchronizers (important back in the days before hot shoes were commonplace)
B-C advantages:
- A consistently large supply of current is available from the capacitor
- The B-C system works best for multiple flash setups
- Because the capacitor drains off small amounts of current, aging of the battery has little effect on the B-C system
- The battery used in a B-C system can give a much longer life than those used in battery-only systems, often several years
The big disadvantage of the B-C system during that period was that the initial cost of the B-C system was far higher than a battery-only system (also B-C systems could not be used with solenoid synchronizers).
It’s important to recognize that a flashbulb is ignited primarily by high current, not high voltage. A standard 1.5V battery could provide a high current for a short period of time (usually two batteries for 3V); on the other hand, an equivalent B-C unit used a high-voltage battery that would provide a low current to charge a capacitor, which then in turn would provide the high current during flash. So the voltages of the batteries are not as critical as it may seem: for instance, the Kodak Flasholder and Heiland Synchro-Mite guns each could use either two 1.5V C cells or a B-C unit charged by a 22.5V cell in the exact same equipment (fun fact: the 22.5V cells originally used in the ‘50s were known as “hearing aid” cells because they were developed for use in the rudimentary hearing aid systems of the time—high voltage and low current).
By the early ‘60s most mid-range to high-end flash units had gone to a built-in B-C system. There are many reasons for this: the costs of the B-C systems were coming down; photographers were beginning to use much longer rolls of film as 35mm film became much more popular, requiring more reliable firings of flashbulbs in quick succession; flash units in general were getting much smaller in response to consumer demands for smaller cameras, smaller flashbulbs, and more compact systems. Cheaper cameras continued to use battery-only flash up until the mid-‘60s, at which time cheap cameras had begun transitioning to flashcubes.
Question 3: Were there really “Photoflash” batteries back then? How were they different from other batteries?
Yes, I own examples of both photoflash and regular versions of batteries from that time period. This was the time before alkaline cells had hit the market. Photoflash batteries were identical in shape but used different chemistry than regular batteries at the time. The photoflash batteries were formulated for short bursts of high current, while regular batteries (commonly called “flashlight” batteries) were formulated to provide longer life of constant use at a lower current. Once the far-superior alkaline batteries became readily available in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s, the special “photoflash” batteries disappeared from the market. Incidentally, the older photoflash and regular batteries of the ‘50s are far lighter in weight than modern alkaline batteries of the same size. So when we think of putting two C cells in a flash unit and consider it to be somewhat heavy and clumsy, in the old days these would not have been as heavy as we would think them to be.
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Question 4: What is the wiring diagram of a B-C flash unit?
There were two common types of B-C flash units in use at the time, one called the “open B-C system” and one called the “closed B-C system”. The open system was more popular and was set up like this:
View attachment 271509
In this system the insertion of a flashbulb into the unit would initiate the charging of the capacitor. The current through the flashbulb was kept low by the size of the resistor in the circuit.
The closed system was wired like this:
View attachment 271508
This system was less widely used because of the issues brought up in this forum: the battery would continuously charge the capacitor, and if the capacitor had any faults it would slowly discharge the battery over time.
I do not know which system the Tilt-A-Mite uses.
Question 5: How does a flashbulb actually get fired?
The business parts of a flashbulb are the wire leads, a filament, primer, and the combustible material. The filament is designed to burn out almost instantly once a current is passed through the wire leads. The sudden high heat generated by the burning filament in turn ignites the primer on the wire leads, which kicks off the main flash process. The primer is typically zirconium paste which is coated on the wire leads. It ignites in one or two milliseconds after the current is applied to the filament, producing an intense heat and exploding particles of ignited paste in all directions inside the bulb. In Class F bulbs the primer provides ALL of the light for the flashbulb. In standard bulbs the primer touches off the burning of the main combustible material. The amount of primer and the size and quantity of combustible material are held to very close tolerances so that the time-light performance is consistent from bulb to bulb.
View attachment 271510
There's a whole other conversation to be had regarding synchronization of flashbulbs with various shutter types, which I find fascinating as well, but that would be a whole separate long discussion!
If you've made it this far...thanks for reading!