Actually no OM has an electric shutter release...
Release of the first curtain is always triggered mechanically by the
completion of the mirror raising action (which is itself always mechanically
triggered from the shutter release button). On the fully electronic cameras,
there is an electric interrupter between these two actions which provides
the self timer function (which is why they "pre-fire" the mirror). The
cameras with "electronic" shutters have electronic control only of the
second curtain release, not the first curtain.
The problem with using the bottom release bar to fire will be that there is
no guarantee that two winders or motor drives will have the same delay
between the shorting of their release buttons and the moving of the release
pin, and there is also no guarantee that the release point of bottom release
bar will be the same for any two cameras. Therefore although it is a
perfectly good way of roughly synchronising two cameras, it will not be
necessarily any more accurate than a DCR, and of course cannot be adjusted
like a DCR can.
Regards,
Julian
----- Original Message -----
From: "DrT (George Themelis)" <drt-3d@xxxxxxx>
To: "Olympus Camera Discussion" <olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, August 01, 2009 8:47 PM
Subject: Re: [OM] Question OM1 remote release
>> The OM-1 has a mechanical linkage in the bottom of the camera that
>> connects
>> to a mechanical pin on the winder.
>
> OK, I got it! Cool! I was able to trigger the cameras with a little
> screwdriver from the bottom.
>
>> Most manufacturers had a different winder or drive for
>> each camera model, but all of olympus's winders/motors work on all
>> bodies!
>
> Yes, it is clever. Someone might claim that it is limited at the same
> time:
> Cameras with an electrical shutter (OM2, OM4) can be triggered by just
> making an electric contact (sorting two wires). This is not an option
> with
> Olympus. If one does not want to use the winder or motor drive (which adds
> weight), he is forced to use a mechanical cable release, because there is
> no
> provision for an electrical cable release (just two wires shorted by a
> switch). The mechanical cable release could shake the camera (at least in
> theory, in high magnification or astrophotography applications).
>
> I am curious to test how accurate the camera synchronization is, based on
> this mechanical triggering.
>
> George
>
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