Confessions of a wannabe Photographer

All about a Geek with a camera, high hopes, and little money or talent. Follow his journey as he discovers a few tips / tricks / hints, and tries to find semi-decent equiptment on the cheap.

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Location: "The South", United States

On a never-ending search for the missing "prodigal principles" in a world of confusion, and hoping I can leave a few nuggets of wisdom for my posterity, (and praying that I don't totally screw up my kids and family...)

Monday, September 24, 2007

Current Score: Noah - 2, Broken Sigma Flashes - 0

Well, today I got my third Sigma "EF 500 DG Super" flash, and the second one I picked up for a song. I bought the first one a few years a go to go with my D-Reb.

Number 2 and 3 both came in needing a little love.

I bought Number 2 from a guy who had broken off part of the plastic hot-shoe mount, and wondered why it wasn't working with his Digital Rebel anymore. There is a switch on the D-Reb's hot-shoe that senses if a flash is attached, and the part of the flash's mount that broke off happened to be the same piece that triggered the switch. $15 for a new hot-shoe mount from Sigma, and it works like new.

Number 3 came in the mail today. The guy I bought it from said it just suddenly stopped working, and had no physical damage. As soon as it arrived, I noticed 2 things - there was some corrosion on some of the battery contacts, and the pop-out wide angle diffuser had one of the tabs broken so it slid all the way out.

I didn't know if the flash was done for, but I've had pretty good luck with using basic logic and very little electrical knowledge to repair stuff, (or at least figure out the obvious stuff). I spent a few hours of "quality time" with my favorite screwdriver, (and a roll of Scotch tape to keep the screws and parts together), and pretty much dissected the whole thing. Nothing seemed out of place, so I went ahead and put it all back together.

A word of caution if you plan on trying this at home - wait a long time after you've taken the batteries out (days / weeks?) so the capacitor can discharge. There is a lot of power in the sucker, and the last thing you want to do is have it charge fully, and they empty itself out into your neural pathways. Luckily, this thing has been dead for quite a while, so I was pretty safe.

I got it back together, and worked a bit more on the battery contacts. I scratched them up a bit more, and used a WD-40 "pen" I keep in my bag for work, (you never know when you're going to need WD-40!). I also had to work on some of the corrosion down at the bottom of the battery holder, but after cleaning it out a bit it turned right on and popped without a problem.

A little WD-40 and some steel wool (or a sharp tool to scratch) can go a long way when you find leaking batteries in your gadgets.

I like the Sigma flashes. They seem to be at the right "bang-for-the-buck" point that I go for in my gear. Since I'm not Pro, I don't have the money to drop for the Canon stuff, but the Sigma's still have a guide number of 50M @ 105mm, and have most of the bells and whistles (like E-TTL wireless control) that the big boys do.

I was looking for a nice Nikon SB-24/25/26/28, but with the popularity of the Strobist "less-is-more" movement, those are getting harder to come by, so I keep an eye out for a nice Sigma that needs a little TLC.

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5 Comments:

Blogger Bolty said...

Hi

I noticed you were able to repair a broken shoe mount on a Sigma Flash unit. I have the 500 DG Super. Can you tell me where I can purchase these parts because I broke the mount on mine the other day?

Regards Adam

9:10 AM  
Blogger Noah said...

Give Sigma Technical Support a call (http://www.sigmaphoto.com/contact/contact.asp). They should give you the number for "C.R.I.S.", which is the company that now handles their parts.

When I last ordered my shoe mount, it cost $10 + $5 shipping, but the prices may have changed since they have outsourced to another company.

If I were you, I'd go ahead and buy 2 shoe mounts at the same time. You'll save a bit on shipping, but you'll really save on time the next time it happens, (I figure if it happened once it will probably happen again.)

They are pretty easy to replace (as long as you keep track of the springs on the pin contacts). All you need is a small jewelers phillips screwdriver, and feeling comfortable taking small electronics apart. All the components just unscrew, and the cables easily disconnect from the main circuit board in the body of the flash.

If I'm feeling frisky, I may post a how-to later when I have time, (read: probably never unless someone specifically asks for it and the wife isn't feeling sick...)

9:46 AM  
Blogger Bolty said...

I appreciate the quick response. Thank you for the information, I'll send off an email tonight.

I have pulled one of the flashes apart before when it was not firing. Found a wire had crossed onto another contact and hey presto it worked again.

Agree that they are pretty simple to play with... just have to make sure you keep a note of what goes where. I also agree about getting a couple of mounts.

Cheers Adam

9:54 AM  
Blogger Preston said...

Awesome! Thanks for the info on the shoe mounts, I have a broken one as well.

3:10 PM  
Blogger Bolty said...

Hi Preston

I just received my replacement shoe mount. I had to take the whole replacement foot because that is all our supplier in Australia had. Very easy to replace. There are 4 screws that you take out. It is just a matter of removing the broken mount, unclipping the connection plug and pluging in the new one and putting back into place. The hardest part was getting the connection plug back in.

Cheers Adam

1:33 AM  

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