When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: electronic flashlight controls for home camera instructions

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Flashlight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flashlight

    Electronic controls may be operated by buttons, sliders, magnets, rotating heads, or rotating control rings. Some models of flashlight include an acceleration sensor to allow them to respond to shaking, or to select modes based on what direction the light is held when switched on.

  3. Guide number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guide_number

    Cameras with focal-plane shutters—even if they had PC connectors with X, F, M, or S-sync delays ("xenon sync" with zero delay and flashbulbs with peak delays of 5, 20, and 30 ms)—could not be used at speeds that attenuated guide numbers with most types of flashbulbs because their light curves were characterized by rapid rise and fall rates; the second shutter curtain would begin wiping ...

  4. Flash-lamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash-lamp

    A 1910 brochure for the Nesbit High Speed Flashlight Apparatus says, "Raise up the movable plunger and spread the powder also over the bottom of the plunger chamber, under the head of plunger. Insert the electronic squib well into the hole for same, as shown by Fig. 7. Set up the camera and focus upon the object to be photographed.

  5. Flash (photography) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_(photography)

    Flash refers either to the flash of light itself or to the electronic flash unit discharging the light. Most current flash units are electronic, having evolved from single-use flashbulbs and flammable powders. Modern cameras often activate flash units automatically. Flash units are commonly built directly into a camera.

  6. Flash synchronization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_synchronization

    In electronic digital cameras, the mechanism is usually a programmable electronic timing circuit, which may, in some cameras, take input from a mechanical shutter contact. The flash is connected electrically to the camera either by a cable with a standardized coaxial PC (for Prontor/Compur) 3.5 mm (1/8") connector [ 1 ] (as defined in ISO 519 ...

  7. Mechanically powered flashlight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Mechanically_powered_flashlight

    The linear induction, Faraday flashlight, or "shake flashlight" is another type of mechanically powered flashlight. It has been sold in the US beginning with direct marketing campaigns in 2002. This design contains a linear electrical generator which charges a supercapacitor which functions similarly to a rechargeable battery when the ...