What about reaching in the reflector to put in a new bulb and not waiting
long enough, and burning your finger on the 25B in that Argus C3 flash
reflector...? I learned that lesson when I was 14...
I always liked the M3 bulb, smaller but not so small as to be hard to handle
like the AG1B. Another thing, flashbulbs packed a huge amount of light...
Guide numbers (no auto flash here!) of 200+ for ASA-100 (remember 'ASA'...?)
were pretty common. Not too many electronic flashes, even the big ones, can
throw out the light of a 25 or 25B, or even an M3 bulb.
--
Jim Brokaw
OM-'s of all sorts, and no OM-oney...
on 1/21/03 7:33 PM, R. Jackson at jackson.robert.r@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
> Yeah, but they weren't the same as using a strobe, were they? You'd get
> one of those long, narrow boxes of bulbs and each one was a little
> explosion you'd caused. They were hot and when the plastic ones came
> out, deformed, after you'd used them. When you looked at your photo it
> was your mastery of elemental fire that illuminated the faces in the
> image you'd struck. Not to get all prosaic about it, but it was really
> something to use a flashbulb. Even flash cubes were cool in their own
> way. I remember seeing my first Kodak instamatic and thinking, "Man,
> you can fire off four in a row on this puppy." And you could. ;-)
>
> -Rob
>
> On Tuesday, January 21, 2003, at 07:08 PM, Bill Pearce wrote:
>
>> Let's have a show of hands... Who out there has even
>> seen a #6 (GE/Phillips) or #26 (Sylvania) flashbulb?
>> Me, me, me, me.... I've even used them.
>> OK, you two - have you seen one within the last 20 years?
>> Well, no.....
>> Bill Pearce
>
< This message was delivered via the Olympus Mailing List >
< For questions, mailto:owner-olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >
< Web Page: http://Zuiko.sls.bc.ca/swright/olympuslist.html >
|