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Speedlight is the brand name used by Nikon Corporation for their photographic flash units, used since the company's introduction of strobe flashes in the 1960s. Nikon's standalone Speedlights (those not built into the company's cameras) have the ''SB-'' prefix as part of their model designation. Current Speedlights and other Nikon accessories make up part of Nikon's ''Creative Lighting System'' (CLS), which includes the ''Advanced Wireless Lighting'', that enables various Nikon cameras to control multiple Nikon flash units in up to three separate controlled groups by sending encoded pre-flash signals to slave units. Nikon's competitors like Canon and Ricoh use the similar name Speedlite for their flashes. Both names indicate that strobe flashes produce much shorter and more intense bursts of light than earlier photographic lighting systems, such as flashbulbs, or continuous lamps used in some studio situations. ==Models== Nikon's Speedlight units are: (Update September 15, 2014) * SB-1 (discontinued) * SB-2 (discontinued, c. 1970) * SB-3 (discontinued, c. 1970) * SB-4 (discontinued, c. 1971) * SB-6 (discontinued, c. 1965) * SB-7E (discontinued, c. 1974) * SB-8E (discontinued, c. 1975) * SB-9 (discontinued, c. 1978) * SB-10 (discontinued, c. 1978) * SB-E (discontinued, c. 1979) * SB-11 (discontinued, c. 1980) * SB-15 (discontinued) * SB-16 (discontinued) * SB-17 (discontinued, c. 1983) * SB-20 (discontinued) * SB-22 (discontinued) * SB-22s (discontinued) * SB-23 (discontinued) * SB-24 (discontinued) * SB-25 (discontinued) * SB-26 (discontinued) * SB-28 (discontinued) D-TTL Units * SB-28DX (discontinued) * SB-50DX (discontinued) * SB-80DX (discontinued) I-TTL Units * SB-300 * SB-400 (discontinued) * SB-500 * SB-600 (discontinued) * SB-700 * SB-800 (discontinued) * SB-900 (discontinued) * SB-910 * SB-N5 * SB-N7 * SB-R200 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Nikon Speedlight」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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