Is a Nikon AS-15 safe to use with an older flash on a D3300?
Asked 7/14/2016
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I want to use an older flash with a Nikon D3300 via a hot-shoe sync adapter such as the Nikon AS-15. Does the AS-15 isolate the camera from high trigger voltages, or could an older flash still damage the camera?
Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
Photography Stack Exchange contributor
10y ago
2 Answers
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You always need to consider the trigger voltage actually supplied by the flash and the voltage the camera's hot shoe can tolerate without being damaged. Older flashes often have higher voltages than newer DSLRs can tolerate. Since you haven't informed us exactly what kind of "old flash" you are considering, we have no way of finding out what the trigger voltage is for the flash in question.
When the camera's shutter is released by pressing the shutter button all the way down the shutter begins to open. When the first shutter curtain is fully open exposing the entire sensor at the same moment (if the shutter speed selected is slower than the camera's flash sync speed), the connection between the center pin and the ground (on either the hot shoe and/or, with some cameras, the PC terminal connector) is completed inside the camera. When this circuit closes it allows voltage from the flash to flow through the camera and back to the flash where it causes the flash to discharge the energy stored in the flash's capacitor(s).
A word of caution about using an older or undocumented flash with your expensive DSLR: When a charged flash is connected to a hot shoe and the hot shoe completes the circuit a lot of voltage can flow through the camera's circuitry. If the voltage supplied by the flash is higher than the camera can tolerate, you will probably irreparably fry your camera's circuitry, or at least those parts connected to the hot shoe.
Different cameras have different flash voltages they are designed to tolerate without damage. Some can only handle a few volts in the 6-10 volt range. Others can work with flash output voltages of 250 volts or more. Check the specifications for your camera and do not allow more voltage than for which your camera is rated to flow through the hot shoe! Most Nikon cameras can tolerate 250V, but you need to confirm this is the case for your D3300. What does the user manual say?
There are voltage reducers available, but even those can be overloaded beyond their specifications. The one linked above is rated to reduce up to 400 volts to less than 6 volts.
The Nikon AS-15 Sync Terminal Adapter provides no voltage protection and is not recommended for flashes that supply more than 6V.
Another safer option is to use a set of cheap manual wireless triggers. At the worst case scenario you'll only fry the receiver of an $18 set instead of your camera.
Originally by user15871. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
user15871
10y ago
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Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.
The AS-15 is not a voltage isolator. It simply provides a sync connection, so a high-trigger-voltage flash can still pass that voltage to the camera.
The key issue is the flash’s trigger/sync voltage. Older flashes can have much higher sync voltages than modern cameras expect. Before connecting it, find or measure the flash’s sync voltage and compare it with what the D3300 can tolerate. If the flash is outside the camera’s safe range, do not connect it directly.
If your old flash has a high sync voltage, use a dedicated protection device such as a Wein Safe-Sync or another voltage limiter/isolator.
So: yes, you can use an older flash only if its sync voltage is confirmed safe for the D3300. No, the Nikon AS-15 itself does not provide that protection.
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