Are Camera Flashes Deadly? Shocking Truth Behind Fatal Camera Incidents

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The discussion centers around the claim that a camera flash can be deadly, particularly in proximity to high-voltage sources. A story is referenced about a photographer near a substation who allegedly died when his camera flashed, supposedly due to electric current traveling through the camera. Many participants express skepticism, suggesting the story lacks credible sources and may stem from historical flash photography practices involving dangerous materials. Some theorize that modern cameras could pose risks if damaged, allowing electrical currents to flow through sweat or cracks in the casing. Overall, while the idea of a deadly camera flash is debated, it is largely viewed as implausible in contemporary photography contexts.
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killed by camera flash??!

i've read a story from somewhere. a guy was trying to take photos using his camera. unfortunately he was standing near a high-voltage substation. once the camera flashed,
he was killed immediately. they said that the electric current flows trough the camera flash to his body. is this true? how can this be possible?
 
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Didiyy said:
i've read a story from somewhere. a guy was trying to take photos using his camera. unfortunately he was standing near a high-voltage substation. once the camera flashed,
he was killed immediately. they said that the electric current flows trough the camera flash to his body. is this true? how can this be possible?

Sounds like total nonsense to me
 


"I've read a story somewhere" is not an acceptable source. You have to point us to it if you want to discuss it.
 


The origin of this seems to be an Indian student who climbed onto the top of a train in order to photograph a group of friends, after that it becomes confusing as to the voltage of the cables that killed him. Google camera flash death.
 


Didiyy said:
i've read a story from somewhere. a guy was trying to take photos using his camera. unfortunately he was standing near a high-voltage substation. once the camera flashed,
he was killed immediately. they said that the electric current flows trough the camera flash to his body. is this true? how can this be possible?
Welcome to physics forums, Didiyy! http://img269.imageshack.us/img269/8645/mythbusterssmiley.gif

To my mind the story has credibility—providing it happened maybe 60 or more years ago. In the early days of flash photography the camera operator ignited a pan of magnesium powder to generate an intense flash of light. Ignition was almost explosive and threw up a cloud of white oxide, together with unignited magnesium dust. If this cloud were to envelop high voltage overhead lines there may be a flash over through the magnesium cloud to ground, and with the camera operator holding the ground electrode (aka, flash pan) high in his upheld hand, he would not stand a chance. He would have to be unlucky, certainly, but igniting flares or flash pans in the vicinity of early substations could conceivably be recklessly tempting fate.
 
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I doubt anything like that could have occurred with a modern day camera; unless they had a stroke. I don't know.
 


I think it more likely touching the high voltage line generated a flash or perhaps even triggered the camera/flash?
 


Don't some electronic camera flashes use some pretty stout capacitors? Consider this scenerio...

The camera has been dropped, it's case is cracked in multiple locations. The day is hot causing the photographer to sweat. Sweat seeps into the cracks and contacts circuitry for the flash in 2 places. The photographer is holding the camera with both hands. When the flash goes off current from the capacitor travels through the sweat/cracks in the case to one hand, up the arm, across the chest, back down the other arm and back into the camera through another crack. Perhaps the photographer has a pace-maker or other heart condition which makes him more susceptible to electric shock.
 
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