Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2014/04/18

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Subject: [Leica] A bit OT, but we're Renaissance folks, right?
From: henningw at archiphoto.com (Henning Wulff)
Date: Fri, 18 Apr 2014 15:24:57 -0700
References: <E169A97E-65C3-4C5E-AC7B-DB4208E2EA93@bex.net>

Either or both of those things are very likely, as far as I know. The 
internal battery has to have some charge in it for the whole camera to work, 
and capacitors are the most finicky component, if you don't consider 
switches, buttons and variable resistors.

Henning



On 2014-04-18, at 2:52 PM, Howard Ritter <hlritter at bex.net> wrote:
>  
> An internal intermediary battery that gets charged by the main batteries, 
> purpose being to preserve the computer's data when the main batteries get 
> discharged, and without a charge on which the camera won't work? And as it 
> charges up, starts to run the camera incrementally? The manual makes no 
> mention of an internal battery or of a period of recovery if the camera's 
> been unused for years (maybe Nikon didn't even know this could happen).
> 
> An electrolytic capacitor that loses its polarity in years of non-use, 
> then re-forms over several minutes after new batteries are installed?
> 
> Anyone know or have thoughts?
> 
> ?howard, n7exn
> 
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Henning Wulff
henningw at archiphoto.com






Replies: Reply from hlritter at bex.net (Howard Ritter) ([Leica] A bit OT, but we're Renaissance folks, right?)
In reply to: Message from hlritter at bex.net (Howard Ritter) ([Leica] A bit OT, but we're Renaissance folks, right?)