professional underwater flash cables

Why professional underwater flash cables have exactly 613 fiber cores?

In underwater photography, plastic optical fiber (POF) trigger cables are the mainstream solution for connecting cameras to external strobes. Their core advantages lie in their water resistance, reliability, and universal compatibility.

## 1. How It Works: Transmitting Flash Signals via Light

The core principle is elegant and straightforward:

  • The Signal: When the shutter is pressed, the camera’s built-in flash (or a hot-shoe LED trigger inside the housing) emits a light signal.
  • Total Internal Reflection: One end of the optical fiber receives this light. Utilizing the principle of Total Internal Reflection—where the highly transparent PMMA core is surrounded by a cladding with a lower refractive index—the light is repeatedly reflected and transmitted internally to the other end with minimal loss.
  • Synchronization: Upon receiving the light pulse, the light-sensitive slave sensor on the external strobe triggers the flash instantly, achieving precise synchronization with the camera’s shutter.

## 2. Why “Plastic” Instead of Glass?

Underwater environments place extreme demands on the flexibility and durability of gear. Plastic optical fiber (made of PMMA) perfectly meets these challenges:

  • High Flexibility: It can be tightly coiled into a spring shape, stretching over 1 meter without losing its shape or breaking, allowing photographers to reposition strobe arms freely.
  • Cost-Effective & Durable: PMMA is highly resistant to moisture and salt. Unlike glass fibers, it will not suffer from stress fractures or micro-cracks over prolonged underwater use, and it is inexpensive to replace if accidentally damaged.
  • High Transmission Efficiency: It offers excellent transmission for visible light, ensuring the sync signal reaches the strobe reliably without noticeable attenuation.

## 3. The Gold Standard: Multi-Core Cables (613-Fiber)

Professional underwater fiber optic cables are almost exclusively multi-core (fiber bundles); single-core cables are rarely used today. Even when bent at sharp angles, a multi-core cable ensures that a vast majority of its micro-fibers continue to transmit light normally, preventing misfires.

  • The Industry Standard: 613-core cables are the standard equipment across premium brands like Sea&Sea, INON, Nauticam, and Backscatter.
  • Specifications: Made of premium PMMA, these cables feature a core diameter of approximately 1.5mm, offering a perfect balance of low attenuation and high pliability.
  • The Benefit: They deliver uniform light transmission at all angles, ensuring stable performance from shallow reefs to the deep ocean, and boast strong resistance to ambient sunlight interference.