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- From: leigh@carson.u.washington.edu (Barbara Leigh)
- Newsgroups: rec.scuba
- Subject: Slave strobe for Ikelite Aquashot
- Date: 26 Jan 1993 06:33:55 GMT
- Organization: University of Washington, Seattle
- Lines: 87
- Distribution: usa
- Message-ID: <1k2m0jINNhdu@shelley.u.washington.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: carson.u.washington.edu
-
- I've recently purchased the slave strobe made by Ikelite for use with the
- Aquashot housing for disposable cameras. Here's my report for interested
- Aquashot users:
-
- The Ikelite Substrobe AQ/S is made especially for the Aquashot by Ikelite.
- It's made out of the same kind of molded plastic as the housing itself
- (thereby enhancing the overall "Fisher-Price" appearance of the equipment).
- Here are the specs from the instruction booklet:
-
- Guide number (ISO 100): 46 surface, 12 underwater
- Coverage angle: 65 deg.
- Color Temperature: 5600 deg. K
- Power source: 4 AA-cell alkaline (the instructions recommend
- not using nicad batteries, but give no reason)
- Flashes: 550 (I don't know if this is the bulb life or
- per battery set or what)
- Recycle time: 3 seconds
- Weight: 1.3 lbs with batteries
- Depth rating: 300 feet (90 m)
-
- The strobe attaches to an that which attaches to the accessory
- shoe on the top of the Aquashot housing. Everything seems pretty secure.
- The alignment of the strobe is such that it will illuminate between
- 2 and 6 feet, according to the instructions. This alignment is preset
- and can't be changed (it's molded into the plastic).
-
- The strobe comes with two other little gizmos: a flash deflector and
- a "water correcting lens." The water correcting lens is a lens that fits
- over the camera lens. It's not a water tight fit (it's not intended
- to be!); water fills the space between the housing and the
- water correcting lens. Maybe someone who was paying more attention in
- physics class when they covered optics can explain to me sometime why and
- how this works. The purpose of this lens is to allow you to focus as
- close as 2 feet underwater. NOTE: take this OFF if you want to take
- pictures on land! (focus is way out of whack otherwise, which I proved
- to myself with a test shot) The water correcting lens screws into that
- little hole by the lens window on the front of the camera housing.
- The flash deflector is held in place by the water correcting lens. It
- fits over the flash window on the housing, and deflects the flash
- up to the flash sensor on the strobe (when using, make sure you don't
- block this pathway; easy to do with clumsy gloved hands). This flash
- triggers the strobe to fire; ergo, you have to use the flash version
- of the disposable camera.
-
- Cost: $150 at the local dive shop. Also available is a padded case to
- put housing and strobe in. It's soft-sided (Cordura, I think) and costs
- $30. Yikes. Or you can do like I did and get a plastic toolbox for $9
- from your local hardware store (the 15" size is perfect) and scrounge some
- foam rubber to pad it with.
-
- So far I've taken the strobe on one dive. It seemed to work fine. By that
- I mean the battery compartment didn't flood, and the slave was successfully
- triggered (I can tell from a few of my pictures that it didn't fire; I
- didn't notice this at the time but it's obvious from the photos.
- I think this is because I had part of my hand over the flash pathway).
- It was easy to use; the only problem I had was that the on/off switch on
- the strobe was a bit difficult to work with heavy gloves on cold fingers.
- So I just kept the switch in the "on" position most of the time. The
- other mini-bummer is that the whole thing is very positively buoyant,
- as you Aquashot owners know. I find that when I'm using the wrist loop
- (either on my wrist, or attached to a hook on my weight belt) the thing
- floats up and gets tangled up in my hoses. This is still the case,
- and may be exacerbated by the fact that you've now got more stuff on the
- housing to get tangled. What I ended up doing was just carrying the
- whole thing around by the attachment arm.
-
- And now, after all this, the acid test: THE PICTURES. Here in Puget Sound,
- the water is so murky and dark that (1) the built-in flash of the
- disposable cameras is way too wimpy for many applications; (2) the
- backscatter is bad. I used the strobe on a shallow dive (15') with
- viz of 10-15'. (Note that even though this is shallow, due to the weather
- and the conditions it wasn't exactly sunlit) As I mentioned, the flash
- didn't fire on several of my shots, due I believe to my own ineptitude
- (see above), but on those pictures, dark as they were, the absence of
- backscatter was downright refreshing. It's really true that the range
- of the strobe is 2-6 feet -- the shots that I took of objects that were
- farther away look pretty lousy. However, my shots of stuff that was
- 3-5 feet away look great! The water even looks CLEAR!
-
- To sum up: I like it. It costs a fair chunk of change, but there was a
- big difference in the quality of my pictures. It is not a panacea for
- murky waters like ours, however -- you're pretty limited in the distance
- range of things you can successfully photograph. (I'm sure that U/W
- photographers know this quite well already, but I'm just learning :-) )
- Also, the difference in the results might not be as striking for those
- lucky folks who do their diving (and their photography) in clear water and
- sunshine.
-