Nikon SB-16A/B TTL Speedlight Flashes
Nikon SB-16A/B TTL Speedlight Flashes
USER REVIEWS
[Sep 30, 2012]
Bill
Intermediate
Strength:
Pros-Dirt cheap(used of course)compared to modern TTL flashes for today's digital cameras.
Weakness:
Cons-HUGE and heavy, It dwarfs my SB-80DX and SB-800
First off, the SB-16 is huge. It weighs 520 grams with 4 aa batteries. It's about the size and weight as the Nikon SB-900 and 910. There are several modes. Manual-full power manual. TTL-TTL with Nikon film cameras. It does NOT do TTL with digital SLRs. MD-"motor drive" mode. It fires at approx. 1/16 power(manual)to keep up with a motor drive. The secondary flash does NOT fire in MD mode(but it does in all other modes). A1 and A2 modes-non TTL auto. This mode is where you set the flash and camera to the same ISO and f stop. And the sensor on the front of the flash determines correct exposure. For example, at 100ISO, you select f/8 in A1 mode and f/4 in A2. At 200ISO, you select f/11 in A1 and f/5.6 in A2. I do not like the f stop choices. At 100ISO, the largest aperture you can shoot at is f/4. Many flashes allow f/2.8 or f/2, which I prefer. There's a round dial "computer" on the back(I think that's what they called it back then). It does not change settings, just lets you know the flash range when you rotate it to the proper position.
Similar Products Used: Nikon SB-80DX, Pentax AF280T |
[May 31, 2001]
RD Kenwood
Intermediate
Strength:
Bounce/zoom/swivel. If there's a surface to bounce from, you can hit it with this flash.
Weakness:
Eats batteries like crazy. Solution: use rechargeable NiMH batteries. I have used lithiums in mine (not recommended by Nikon), and that has worked fine too. A big sucker. I like the secondary wink light. But this thing is heavy and eats batteries. I have both A and B versions (F3 foot and ISO foot). The swivel feature is especially nice. The head also has bounce and zoom settings. Compared to an equivalent monster flash, like the Vivitar 285HV, the SB-16 only offers two automatic settings, full-power manual, and a motor drive setting which is essentially 1/16 power. Oh yes, and TTL, which is the main difference. Customer Service N/A. Similar Products Used: Lots of Nikon flashes, plus the classic Vivitar 283 and 285HV. |