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Other Controls 

On the back, just above the LCD is the 

swivel release

. Push it before swiveling the flash head from 

straight forward. On the right side at the center of the tilt joint there is the 

tilt release button

 to be 

pressed before raising the flash head. This combination of swivel and tilt allows the flash to be 
bounced off the ceiling or wall regardless of whether the camera is held in a horizontal or vertical 
position. The head can also be pointed down 7 degrees for close objects.  

There is a pull out 

flash diffuser

 just above the front lens of the flash. It is rated to cover the 

viewing area of an 18mm lens. This is somewhat over rated but it is a nice feature. When you pull it 
out the flash will automatically zoom to its widest position. Its guide number is reduced to 52 feet 
with ISO 100 film.  

When you are using the flash to bounce off the ceiling the flash diffuser can be pulled almost all the 
way out but not pulled down over the flash lens. This way, with your flash pointed straight up, the 
diffuser acts as a small bounce card to reflect some of the light directly into your subjects eyes for 
both shadow reduction and catch lights.  

On the front of the Speedlite there is a near infrared 

auto focus assist light

. It is good up for to 

nearly 50 feet coupled with the EOS 1n’s center AF point and a 50mm f/1.4 lens. It enables the side 
AF points as far as 20 feet. On most EOS cameras this AF assist light will be used instead of the 
one on your camera, but on the EOS 5/A2e/A2 and EOS 10/10s models the camera will continue to 
use its own AF assist light.  

The 540EZ also has a 

flash foot locking pin

that mates with a hole in most Canon flash shoes. This 

keeps the flash from slipping back and loosing connection with some of its contacts. By partially 
screwing down the locking ring you can lower this pin before attaching it to the camera and still 
slide the flash on quickly and securely.  

Power Options 

AA batteries 

This flash uses 4 AA Alkaline, NiMH or NiCad batteries.  

NiCads

 offer the fastest recycling. 4-6 seconds until nearly exhausted, which usually happens 

between 80 and 140 cycles, depending on the MiHr rating of the battery.  

Alkalines

 last the longer if you are patient enough for the slow recycles. They Start out at 8 seconds 

but after 20 pops it’s down to 11 seconds. After 70 it takes over 15 seconds and speed continues to 
decline until at 200 cycles it takes 45-60 seconds, depending on how warm the batteries are. They 
will continue beyond this, but what’s the point?  

NiMHs

 offer recycles nearly as fast as the NiCads. I recorded 4.5 to 5.5 seconds for the first 120 

full power cycles with 1300 MiHr AA’s. At 150 cycles it was still just 8 seconds and they continued 
to the 170 mark where it took a full 40 seconds to charge. These have power characteristics that are 
very similar to NiCads but last longer.  

Lithium

 AAs can be used for the 540EZ as well. They last longer than other AAs and cycle the 

flash somewhat faster than Alkalines (7 seconds for fresh ones).  

All of my recycle tests were done with full power pops in manual mode, timing to when the red 
indicator light first came on. A full power recycle actually takes about 50 percent more time and 
provides about ½ stop more light according to my flash meter.  

External Battery Packs 

Quantum offers 540EZ adapters for the Battery 1, 1+, 1 Compact and Bantam external batteries. 
The same adapter is used for the 550EX. These are 

6 volt external batteries

 that have a dummy 

Pagina 3 di 4

EOS Documentation - 540EZ Operator's Manual

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