Why I developed the RBPS Rechargeable Battery Power Supply
for the Stroboflash line of photographic strobe units.
History:
I have been involved in photography and electronics all of my
life. At age 8, I was processing film in my bedroom closet and
doing contact prints. In 7th grade (1965) my buddy Bill and I
built a Tesla Coil for the school science fair. We eventually won
3rd place at the City of Chicago citywide science fail. In 8th
grade (1966) I built a charge pulse ruby LASER for the same
science fair.
During my years at University of Illinois College of
Engineering I ran a photographic service doing fraternity /
sorority party and dance pictures. That is where I developed my
LUST for Stroboflash equipment. Stroboflash equipment at that
time was the defacto standard issue portable flash equipment for
professional photographers. Stroboflash units NEVER let me down
and actually made a bit of money for me.
After graduation I became a building contractor. In the
eighties I discovered the Zen of computers and opened a computer
software company. No time for photography or electronics.
Fast forward to 2006.
My wife bought me a Nikon D70 for Christmas and I was again
hooked on photography! I dragged out all my old Stroboflash
equipment and discovered that the batteries cost $80 each!! I
was just not going to pay $160 for one time use batteries. I
used to pay $12 each in the 70's, and that was too much. The
first thing I did was build a plug in the wall power supply for
the Stroboflash. That worked great and I decided to sell one on
EBay. The guy who bought it was satisfied but one of the guys
who did not win the bid contacted me about building more AC
power supplies. I turns out he is the worlds largest collector
of Stroboflash equipment. We developed quite an email / internet
relationship. He convinced me that the world would sink in to
oblivion unless I designed a rechargeable battery power supply
for the Stroboflash. Not wanting to spend the rest of my life
living in oblivion, I spent the better part of 3 months
developing the RBPS.
The first prototype used parts that I had on hand. From my
workshop I grabbed the battery off my Dewalt circular saw, using
it for the RBPS power. The unit worked the first time I turned
it on and I was STOKED (surfer talk - means whoopee!). I sent a
prototype to my new found buddy, the collector, and he had to
purchase a large supply of DEPENDS because he was peeing in his
pants!
The Dewalt battery worked great but did not quite fit in the
case. There was no commonly available connector to connect to it
so we decided to use off the shelf robot / radio controlled car
batteries. Twenty C sized cells connected in series turns out to
provide a huge amount of power. I am quoting 400 flashes per
charge but that is very conservative. After several hundred
flashes the unit never slows down. I suspect the actual number
of flashes per charge is much closer to 1000. Much, much more if
you fire at lower power settings.
So that is the story. The RBPS is a really solid design. If
you have Stoboflash equipment you really need some RBPS units to
power them. They will be available 08/2006. We are waiting on
the production PC boards to come back from the manufacturer. I
will assemble and test them here at my shop in Florida.
Best Regards
Stroboflash AL
RBPS Prototype #1 (05/2006)
Uses one Dewalt 18v NiCd drill battery. Nice for a first
prototype but a little kludgy.

RBPS Prototype #3 (Pre-production model) 07-2006
Uses two widely available 12volt NiMh RC car batteries.
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