EOS 5 pc cord problem

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I have a couple of EOS 5 bodies and 540EZ flash units. I just got a lightstand and umbrella and want to use the 540EZ in manual mode to light some portraits, etc. I got a 10 ft pc cord and a pc to hotshoe adapter (which has a short cord attached) to connect the camera to the flash. I connected everything and started shooting to get a good exposure starting point to calculate from (no flash meter). I shot 7 times successfully, then the flash stopped firing. I disconnected the 10 ft cord, plugged into the hotshoe adapter, and it worked again. Took the camera, cord/connector and flash back to the store (SE Camera in Raleigh, NC - knowledgable people, not cashiers) to get them to check it out. The cord fired every time when shorted or connected to different cameras; still didn't work with mine. So, we hooked it up hotshoe to pc to hotshoe, and it worked again with the EOS 5. Left the store, back at home -- doesn't work. Removed the 10 ft cord again (a different one, by the way), and it works.

Any ideas why this is happening?

-- Kevin Miles Allen (kevinmallen@worldnet.att.net), December 04, 2001

Answers

This same kind of thing happens when people use generic optical slaves with Canon Speedlites. Only it usually fires once and then locks up. You can reset it to fire again by pressing the open flash button (the red light). It will then fire once more before locking up. Turning it off and back on does the same thing. Some 540EZ's seem to be affected like this and others don't.

You can try to make sure none of the other four flash foot contacts get shorted out on the hotshoe adapter. A piece of tape usually works. This may or may not work with your setup though. Some 540EZ's (and other Canon Speedlites as well) just don't like working with anything but real Canon hotshoes.

Two other options are using Canon's modualr TTL wire set (very expensive) or using a Ikelite Lite-Link TTL optical slave ($80 at adorama.com). Either one will still allow TTL metering if you want and manual settings when you don't.

-- Jim Strutz (j.strutz@gci.net), December 04, 2001.


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