Hacking the Kodak Max Single Use Flash Camera into a Self-Repeating Strobe

NOTE - this approach is recommended mainly for homebrewing a strobe that is powered by a single 1.5 volt battery. If you can use a higher supply voltage, there are better ways to do this.

DANGER - Electric Shock Hazard! Read This Article in its Entirety Before Starting! Use Appropriate Caution! It is advised to wear dry work gloves for this, especialy before becoming experienced with this. Insulated tools, especially a flat blade screwdriver with a plastic handle, are recommended in general for hacking flash cameras. Note that many cameras other than the Kodak Max are different and you need even more caution since this article does not say how to hack those.

DANGER - The photoflash in a Kodak Max typically stores 5.4 joules of energy. There is considerable talk in the world that it takes 10 joules to kill someone from a capacitor discharge, but there is also significant scientific opinion the lesser amounts have some chance of being fatal. Critical variables include skin moisture content and distribution and also what point of the heartbeat cycle your heart is in if you get shocked.

It is recommended to read these web files for additional safety info, mainly on the electric shock hazards:

My Xenon Safety Page. At least look at the shock victim picture!

And the safety portions of Sam Goldwasser's Xenon Flash/Strobe FAQ.

WARNING - Hack flash cameras and the like only at your own risk. Manufacturers, distributors, suppliers, web page authors and hosters will not be liable for death or injury, pain and suffering, whether to people or pets or livestock, nor damage to real or personal property.

Starting with a Max That Your Purchased

The first step is to remove the film. Be sure the film is fully wound in. Then use a flat blade screwdriver to pry up the tab at the seam in the middle of the right side of the camera. The right side of the rear panel of the camera should then pop up. You can swing this part open to get the film. This is ordinary enough Kodak MAX 35 mm. color print film ready for processing.

Removing the Battery

On the left side of the camera is a seam with a tab in it - pry this tab up with a flat blade screwdriver. This opens the battery compartment. You can then shake the battery out or pry it out with a plastic handle or otherwise insulated screwdriver. Note that the photoflash capacitor in the camera can still have a charge and can still shock so the need to avoid touching metal parts of the camera is not over.

Keep the battery - it is probably hardly used.

Starting With a Used Camera

You can get used "disposable" cameras at some photofinishing places. Many may not give you used cameras since they may need to send them to be recycled or to avoid liability from letting people be exposed to the shock hazard. If you succeed, you may be able to specifically request Kodak Max ones or you may get any old cameras, probably including Max ones. Note that most others will probably be different in disassembly - use extreme caution. It is advisable to wear dry work gloves and use insulated tools to minimize the shock hazard - these cameras often have partially charged photoflash capacitors and sometimes have batteries included.

If you get a used Max, the film will already be removed and the battery may be removed.

Opening the Camera

With the film and battery compartments open, use an insulated flat blade screwdriver to pry open the camera by prying at the seam in the middle of the top. It is advisable to be wearing dry work gloves. Pryong the camera open separates the rear panel from the rest of the camera. The spindle that the film was on will easily fall out - do not be startled in the likely event that it does.

Removing the Front of the Camera

With one hand, hold the left end of the camera. Your thumb should be on the tab at the left end by the battery compartment and three fingers should be on the front of the camera near the flash and the battery compartment. Have a dry work glove on this hand in case your grip slips - you do not want an arm-to-arm shock! With your other hand, hold the "wall" between the square space and the left film compartment (the one by the battery compartment). You may be able to pull the "guts" from the front of the camera outright, or you may need to use your thumb at the left end to pull on the tab at the battery compartment to let the "guts" come out.

Discharging the Capacitor

With one hand, hold the camera gut portion by a plastic part. A good idea is to not yet even let go of the "guts" from the previous step - the photoflash capacitor and the board are exposed when the front of the camera comes off. The capacitor is in the middle of the bottom of the camera and the board covers most of the left side of the front, between the photoflash capacitor and the flash.

Look for two solder joints on the board closest to the photoflash capacitor. Grab a plastic handled flat blade screwdriver and use the tip of the screwdriver to short these two solder joints. You may get a spark, possibly with a loud "snap" or "bang" sound. Repeat touching both solder joints simultaneously with the screwdriver tip until there is consistently no more sparking. With this done after the battery is removed, the shock hazard is over. You will want to use your "beater" screwdriver since discharging the capacitor will make small pits on the screwdriver.

Removing the Lens Assembly and Shutter and Shutter Spring

You will see the lens in a gray plastic ring on a black plastic frame. There is a copper colored bar between the photoflash capacitor and the black lens frame. Slip a flat blade screwdriver between the copper bar nd the black lens frame and twist the screwdriver to pry off the lens assembly. The lens assembly will usually pop off suddenly. When the lens assembly comes off, a small copper colored spring between the viewfinder is and the shutter is exposed - note the metal tab just under the viewfinder that one end of the spring goes to. This metal tab and the copper bar between the shutter and the photoflash capacitor are the trigger contacts - take note of this! You will need to know what the trigger contacts are! You can then pull off the spring and the shutter with needlenose pliers. The shutter can be dislodged almost just by touching it with a fingertip - you can then probably remove it and the spring with no tools at all. Beware that the spring easily flies away to hide in your carpet - you may want to grab the spring with needlenose pliers to keep this from happening.

The camera gut portion is now ready for modifying into a repeating strobe.

The Sidac Trick

Put two Teccor K1300E70 sidacs (Digi-Key catalog number K1300E70-ND) in series. NOTE - when ordering these, it is a good idea to get some K1200E70's and some K1100E70's just in case you need slightly lower voltage sidacs. Solder the series pair of sidacs across the trigger contacts of the board. The board is now a repeating strobe.

HOW THIS WORKS: The sidacs are devices that are essentially open circuit until a critical voltage is reached, then they switch into a nearly short circuit condition. They are basically improved diacs. When the flash board develops approx. 260 volts across the trigger contacts, the sidacs switch on and this causes contact between the trigger contacts to be made. Once the bard flashes, the sidacs return to their open-circuit state.

I recommend putting the series pair of sidacs over the little hole in the pea-sized round marking where the lens was. I have verified that the front panel of the camera will fit over this. You may want to smush some silicone rubber into the lens hole of the front panel after attaching it if you desire a permanent or well-insulated strobe device that resembles a camera.

The front and rear panels of the camera can be re-attached. Attach the front panel first - more like place the "guts" portion into the front panel, fitting the right side in before the left side. After that attach the rear panel - Note that the tab on the left of the rear panel fits over everything, while the right side of the rear panel has a 2-layer structure that fits over the outer of the two layers of the combination of front panel and gut portion.

The right side of the rear panel should be latched into place first, since the left side of the rear panel does not need to be latched on until the battery is in place.

Place the battery in the battery compartment, with positive to the forked (lower) contact. You will then need to push the flash start button to start strobing. With no other modifications, the camera will flash every few to several seconds at slightly less than full brightness.

Note thet the potion of the rear panel thta covers the battery breaks off easily. You may need to use a rubber band or other hoaky-hacky means to keep the battery in.

More Advanced Hacking!

More can be done!

The board does not have to be contained in the camera. But if you hack the board from the "guts" section of the camera structure, you will need some way to keep the battery connected.

The board is easily separated from a "guts" portion of the camera structure once the lens assembly is removed. All you have to do is hold the black plastc framework with one hand and pull the board off by the edges - it comes off easily. PLEASE DO THIS ONLY WITH NO BATTERY AND WITH THE PHOTOFLASH CAPACITOR PROPERLY DISCHARGED! Note that you still need some means of pushing the flash-start button near the middle of the board to make the darn thing start working.

You can then attach a holder for a 1.5 volt cell to the battery connection points - these do solder easily.

SHORTING THE FLASH-START SWITCH

I recommend against this for now since this reduces the capacitor-charging output from the flash board. Instead I recommend a separate power switch to be spliced in series with the battery to turn this thing off. You will still have to push the flash start button to make the board start working. If necessary, add an "on" or "begin / full-blast" switch in parallel with the board's switch/button works.

FASTER FLASH RATE:

To do this you need to replace the photoflash capacitor with a lower value capacitor. Good candidates are axial lead electrolytic types of value around 10-40 microfarads and workingh voltage 350 to 450 volts. The actual applied voltage is typically 300 volts. When removing the opriginal photoflash capacitor (typically 120 microfarads), the lead closer to the edge of the board is positive and the lead further from the edge of the board is negative.

Substitute capacitors are often bulkier than the original. If you are re-fitting this into a Max camera case, you may need to add hookup wire from the board to the capacitor and then put the capacitor in one of the film compartments of the camera.

JUST NOW TRIED AND GOT WORKING - removed the original 120 uF photoflash capacitor and replaced with a 10 uF Hosfelt Catalog Number 15-976. (800-524-6464) The flash rate on a good 1.5 volt battery increased to roughly twice per second. This particular capacitor does good for this. Sorry, this good capacitor is bulky and does not fit in any of the cavities of a Kodak Max disposable camera. You will need to do a little extra hacking!

UPDATE 11/5/2000 ON SMALL VALUE CAPACITORS - I recommend not going lower than a microfarad. The flash rate at .22 uF was hardly faster than at 1 uF but the flashes were a lot dimmer, as in even more than proportionately dimmer. The flashtube operates less efficiently at lower flash energy.

GOOD CAPACITOR TYPES FOR AROUND 1 MICROFARAD - Sprague MMWA series and Cornell Dubilier WMF Series, such as Hosfelt 15-941.

ABILITY TO TAKE HIGHER SUPPLY VOLTAGE FOR MORE POWER OR FASTER FLASH RATE:

Not good. At 2 volts, critical parts on the board overheat a little and emit a slightly smoking odor with a flash rate noticeably decreasing as some parts get hot. At 3.4 volts, the board conks out and starts producing lots of visible smoke in just 4 seconds! I won't even bother testing at 3 or 2.5 or 2.4 volts based on the results I got!

TROUBLESHOOTING if the unit fails to flash at all:

If you do the above to make a self-repeating strobe and it does not work:

1. See if the neon "flash ready" light lights up. If it does, then the sidacs are not functioning. Check to be sure they are properly connected. If they are, you may need to use lower voltage sidacs such as 120 or 110 volt types instead of the 130 volt types (in a series pair). After everything is totally working, you may want to go back to the higher voltage sidacs and also remove the neon lamp, but do not remove the neon lamp until after the unit is known completely working, or at least completely working except for any effects of the neon lamp. The neon lamp prevents the energy storage capacitor from being charged to a voltage that would damage parts on the board.

2. Listen for the circuitry on the board to make its characteristic whining sound when it starts charging up an uncharged energy storage (photoflash) capacitor. If you suspect the capacitor is charged or your hearing cannot hear this sound, use an apropriate voltmeter or multimeter (switched to an appropriate voltage range) to check for voltage across this capacitor. If the voltage approaches 300 volts with neither flashing nor the neon lamp glowing within about 15 seconds, the main suspect is a weak battery. If the voltage gets to around 300 volts within 15 seconds but nothing happens (including no neon lamp glow) within 60 seconds, then something is broken. If the neon lamp lights, then the sidacs are not connected or are of too high a voltage or are defective.

TROUBLESHOOTING for irregular flash rate:

Listen for multiple tick sounds instead of a single tick. Any extra ticks preceding a flash are unsuccessful trigger attempts. Higher sidac voltages favor better triggering - I think 260 volts as opposed to 220 volts is better.

If a higher sidac voltage results in the neon lamp sometimes turning on, then the neon lamp can cause an irregularity in the flash rate. It stops the inverter from charging the energy storage capacitor beyond approx. 300 volts and it is not consistent in striking at a particular voltage within some particular amount of time. If the strobe is known to be working well except for flash rate irregularities caused by the neon lamp, then you can unsolder the neon lamp. I recommend against removing the neon lamp if the energy storage capacitor is less than 1 microfarad, since the neon lamp may be necessary to prevent the capacitor from reaching a harmful voltage (400 volts or more may result in damaging parts on the board).

If you are using a 260 volt sidac pair and extra triggering attempts are sometimes necessary to make the flashtube flash, then a possibility may be how close the battery is to the board. If the board is removed from the camera, then the battery can fit in close enough to the trigger transformer and the flashtube reflector to add stray capacitance which can load down the trigger pulse. Try having the battery at least 2.5, maybe 3 millimeters from the trigger transformer and the flashtube reflector.

NOTE - I have yet to completely solve flash rate irregularities that can occur when hacking a Kodak Max flash disposable camera into a strobe. Perhaps the flashtube gets a little more difficult to trigger when flashed rapidly or with repeat flash attampts while the inner surface is above a certain temperature. Increasing the value of C3 (on the flash board) or adding a .01 uF 400 volt capacitor in parallel with C3 may fix this - NOT YET TESTED. A higher current lower resistance sidac, such as Teccor Kxxx0G series instead of Kxxx0E70 series may improve things - ALSO NOT YET TESTED!

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

From Sam Goldwasser's Flash/Strobe FAQ:

Schematic for the Kodak Max flash unit.
Photos the Kodak Max flash unit/board, top and bottom.

Note that the board will probably be slightly different from the one photographed, and the schematic may be a bit "off", mainly in value of some parts. Note that the photoflash capacitor is now usually 120 uF in a Kodak Max and is usually 160 uF in cameras other than the Kodak Max but using the same basic flash circuit (including the front button to push to get the flash to charge up).


Written by Don Klipstein.

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