Difference between revisions of "Hot shoe"

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* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_shoe Wikipedia Hot Shoe article]
 
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_shoe Wikipedia Hot Shoe article]
 
* [http://keppler.popphoto.com/blog/2007/01/shoe_fetish.html Inside Straight: Shoe Fetish] accessory shoe history by Herbert Keppler
 
* [http://keppler.popphoto.com/blog/2007/01/shoe_fetish.html Inside Straight: Shoe Fetish] accessory shoe history by Herbert Keppler
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[[Catergory:flash]]

Revision as of 22:19, 16 June 2008

Glossary Terms

An accessory shoe is a slot, usually on top of a camera, for mounting accessories such as flashguns, rangefinders, light meters or special viewfinders.

A hot shoe is an accessory shoe with added electrical contacts for flash synchronisation. One contact is a round, central dot, surrounded by plastic, the other is the shoe itself. This allows mounting a flashgun without a synchronisation cable.

Plain accessory shoe
on a Zeiss Ikon Nettar
"Classic" hot shoe
on a Praktica MTL 5

Hot shoes with dedicated flash contacts
on an Olympus OM-1n, and a Canon A-1

The size of the hot shoe has been standardised, as ISO 518:2006.

Some electronic cameras with dedicated flashguns add extra contacts into the hot shoe to allow the camera and flashgun to communicate, allowing for automatic flash exposure. There is no standardisation between manufacturers for these additional pins.

Very much later than the introduction of the hot shoe, a plain accessory shoe has become known by the back-formation slang name "cold shoe".

Links

Catergory:flash