If you use the flash's "Auto" settings (which measure the reflected
light using its own photocell), you still get the confirmation blink
in the viewfinder with later OM bodies. (You might use that e.g. with
an OM-1n, which can't do TTL flash.)
With a 2n, etc., set to Auto (switch on the *body*), you flip over
the calculator panel, then the body's own off-the-film photocells
measure the light. The camera sends a signal to the flash when to cut
off the flash pulse. That's the TTL auto mode.
I'm not sure what happens when both the flash and the camera are set
to "auto"! But there's no real reason to do that, since TTL auto is
better if it's available. . .
cheers,
--Ross
>Bleah
>Well that destroys my theory on how the T32 works.
>AUTO mode is "Normal Auto", yes (according to my little calculator
>panel)? TTL auto mode is full auto? Does that mean on normal auto, the
>camera sets to 1/60th shutter speed (1/30th? I seem to remember the
>number 1/40th being thrown around with regards to flash operation a
>month or so ago...) and doesn't blink the internal LED if underexposed?
>How does TTL auto work?
>
>Daniel Tan
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