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- Jan 16, 2006
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I only found out about this a week or two ago and thought I'd mention it in case anyone else is interested in building their own remote cable release. This applies to Pentax DSLRs and Canon DSLRs as they use interchangable remotes (I'm not sure if any PnS cameras use the same connector.) Nikons use some other system that isn't so readily made, as I understand it.
You can built your own remote cable release (aka remote shutter, etc) for very cheaply. There's a jack on your camera that accepts a standard submini 3/32s headphone jack. This is not the slightly larger "mini" 1/8th jack that you find with standard headphones, but the smaller one like cell phone headsets use.
The remotes work very simply - they just short either the left or the right channel to ground. One is equivalent to a half-button press, the other fires the shutter. This means that you can make your own using stuff you have lying around or with a few parts from Radio Shack.
I ended up with a 3/32 plug and a couple buttons, for under $6 total. If you have a spare cell headset you don't use, you can probably use that and just cut the headset off and use the wires from there. Because what I got was just the plug, I had to solder the wires to it.
For buttons, you can use anything. One guy has a page where he describes using a computer mouse, with the mouse buttons doing the work. Anything that closes a connection (a SPST switch) will do the trick. I just used a set of small buttons that Radio Shack sells. If you like to do very long exposures (like of stars), you can also wire in a switch, so you can flick it on and leave it, when your camera is in Bulb mode.
For wire, I used an old phone cord, which has four wires inside, because I wanted something about 6' long. You need three (left, right, and ground) wires so I just cut off the unused one when I was stripping back the insulation. You wire it so one button has the left and ground and the other has right and ground - the ground goes to both buttons.
Then you just have to figure out what to put the buttons in. The guy using a mouse was all set already. Some people have used old film canisters. Some use small Radio Shack project boxes. Me, I'm a bit "off" and decided that I wanted something smaller... here's what I ended up with:
I fully expect to get some strange looks with this one.
You can built your own remote cable release (aka remote shutter, etc) for very cheaply. There's a jack on your camera that accepts a standard submini 3/32s headphone jack. This is not the slightly larger "mini" 1/8th jack that you find with standard headphones, but the smaller one like cell phone headsets use.
The remotes work very simply - they just short either the left or the right channel to ground. One is equivalent to a half-button press, the other fires the shutter. This means that you can make your own using stuff you have lying around or with a few parts from Radio Shack.
I ended up with a 3/32 plug and a couple buttons, for under $6 total. If you have a spare cell headset you don't use, you can probably use that and just cut the headset off and use the wires from there. Because what I got was just the plug, I had to solder the wires to it.
For buttons, you can use anything. One guy has a page where he describes using a computer mouse, with the mouse buttons doing the work. Anything that closes a connection (a SPST switch) will do the trick. I just used a set of small buttons that Radio Shack sells. If you like to do very long exposures (like of stars), you can also wire in a switch, so you can flick it on and leave it, when your camera is in Bulb mode.
For wire, I used an old phone cord, which has four wires inside, because I wanted something about 6' long. You need three (left, right, and ground) wires so I just cut off the unused one when I was stripping back the insulation. You wire it so one button has the left and ground and the other has right and ground - the ground goes to both buttons.
Then you just have to figure out what to put the buttons in. The guy using a mouse was all set already. Some people have used old film canisters. Some use small Radio Shack project boxes. Me, I'm a bit "off" and decided that I wanted something smaller... here's what I ended up with:

I fully expect to get some strange looks with this one.
