Background:
After spending two weeks at Wakatobi (see http://echeng.com/travel/wakatobi/) shooting with my Olympus C-5050z/PT-015 and the onboard flash, I realized my shots were very limited without a strobe. While many of my macro or closer shots came out nicely, anything further than about 2 feet went blue/green. This had to change for the next trip.
After some research and expert advice (thanks Eric : ), I purchased an Inon Z-220 strobe. Aside from its small size, light weight and wide, powerful coverage, I was also psyched about the focus light and aiming laser. However, upon unpacking it and reading the manuals I was disappointed to find out that the 5050 wouldn't enable these functions. Interestingly, the strobe does have an optical sensor that will enable both functions on half button pushes of other cameras. I saw this as a challenge.
Solution:
I knew that my Oly 5050 lit the focus LED in dark situations and wondered if I could mount a fiber optic cable to route this light from the camera's LED to the strobe's optical sensor to activate the focus light and laser. I figured that if I could fashion some kind of mount that would hold the fiber optic cable in place directly in front of the LED, I could leverage this camera feature and “fool” the strobe into turning on the focus light and laser. A few minutes devoted to a simple “back of the napkin” design and I was off to my neighborhood Fry's and TAP plastics for parts and raw materials.
Materials:
I figured that I didn't need much other than the following materials:
Thick piece of acrylic (for mount)
2' of fiber optic cable
Rubber washer or fitting to secure fiber on the strobe's optic sensor
Some type of adhesive suitable for water
The Process:
Testing:
Mount Details :
As you can see from the following photos, the mount required quite a bit of routing and cutting in order countersink it around the diffuser mounts on the housing. Also, since the acrylic is so thick and the mount screws are short, I countersunk the screws into each mounting hole as well. You will notice I also roughed up the back of the mount with the Dremel. My intention was to make this non-reflective just in case other people's flash might reflect off the mount and cause your Z-220 to fire. I think this was probably overkill and it looks kind of shabby. I won't bother if I make another one.
Disclaimer :
I have not yet tested this underwater, although I think the only adjustment required may be the distance between the fiber and the LED due to greater light diffusion underwater.
While this first one took a few hours to make, this solution was quite inexpensive with parts about $12. I hope this is helpful to others interested in getting their Z-220 to function well with your C-5050. I'm happy to share these plans with other Wetpixel folks including details such as sizes of drill bits, which Dremel attachments I used, acrylic, etc. And if enough people are interested but don't want to bother making it themselves, I could make a bunch and sell them as kits.
I'm interested in others' thoughts on this idea and design. Please leave a comment below!
Dave Patchen
Hi Dave,
Your design is really very cool. Well done. I assume that the set-up design interfere with the final firing of the strobe in any way? It'd be good to see some pics when you finally get around to it.
Typical isn't it, I just buy myself a Z220s because I wouldn't be able to use the features on the 220 and then this pops up. Ah well, such is life.
I continually impressed by some of the inventivness I see on here and DD.
Tim
you get me thinking now..i take it the af illuminator is what is triggering the strobe ?
af ill only lights for a second or so correct ?
how are you attaching the strobe arms ?
please send me as much details you have as i like this idea.....
Thanks guys. The setup doesn’t affect the firing of the z-220 in any way, although the mount blocks the onboard strobe. I intended this to reduce backscatter. However, if you’re in really clear water it might be good to have a clear mount that’s sanded (for diffusion) or a whitish mount so you can use the onboard flash in conjunction with the Z-220.
Yes, the AF LED illuminator is triggering the laser and focus light. It does only come on for somewhere between 1-2 seconds. This should be enough to frame a shot, or if you do a half press again, you begin the cycle over. I’ll probably get good at half shutter presses. I’ve not attached arms yet, but since the fiber cable is long and flexible, I should have no problem with any arm setup.
Dave
Hi Dave,
please don't forget to send me the info on this system.
i would love to see it with the arms attached, i dont know where you are attaching to.
It’s nice to see Rube Goldberg is still alive and well.... Looks like a nice job and just reading this gave me some good ideas too. I am just switching over from video to still (well, adding still, not abandoning video) and I have started looking at how to not spend too much money on things I could make myself. I had started thinking of making my own digital camera tray with handle from simple PVC pipe (a heat gun will let you soften the plastic enough to bend it or flatten it - when it cools down, it stays where you bent it). Then I suffered an attack of lazy and threw money at Ultralight for the real deal. Can’t look cheezy on a dive trip, you know.
So Dave, did you get a chance to check out the mod in the water? I haven’t seen comments to that effect. Thanks for keeping us thinking out here.
Tim