Orion 52095 用户手册

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After turning the Cooler on, you should see a temperature 
drop of 17°C to 20°C (30.6°F to 36°F) within 30 minutes, 
with a possible further decrease that levels off after about 
an hour.
NOTE: The digital thermometer on the DSLR Cooler dis-
plays the internal temperature as “OUT” and the outside 
(ambient) temperature as “IN” (Figure 10). We know, it’s 
wacky!
2.  After your imaging session, press the ON/OFF button 
again to turn the Cooler off. You’ll know it is off when the 
fan on the back of the housing stops rotating.
To prevent condensation from forming on the cold camera, 
it is best to either:
a.  Leave it in the closed Cooler for a half hour or so 
before removing it, to allow the camera to warm up 
slowly, or
b.  Remove it from the Cooler while still outside and 
immediately place the camera into a plastic bag and 
seal it. (A large zip-lock freezer type food storage 
bag is ideal.) This way the condensation will form on 
the plastic bag, not on the camera itself.
Power Consumption
Drawing 3.7 to 4 amps of current, the DSLR Cooler requires 
lots of power. We recommend running it on at least a 30 
amp-hour (AH) deep-cycle marine battery or, if possible, on 
household 110V power via an AC-to-12V DC adapter rated 
for at least 4 amps (both sold separately). A 30AH battery 
will provide power for up to 7.5 hours of continuous opera-
tion, theoretically (30AH ÷ 4A = 7.5H); a 55AH battery will 
allow nearly 14 hours of continuous operation.
We do not recommend use of the Orion Dynamo Pro 12AH 
or 17AH batteries, since they would power the DSLR Cooler 
for only about 3 or 4 hours, respectively, on a full charge.
Figure 10. On the LCD temperature gauge, the IN reading 
is really the outside temperature and the OUT reading is the 
temperature inside the Cooler! That’s what happens when you 
repurpose an indoor/outdoor car thermometer.
Figure 9. The DSLR Cooler in place and ready to chill!
Figure 8. The interior temperature sensor should not be removed 
from the ceiling of the housing.
Figure 7. Here, a Canon 350D is installed in the DSLR Cooler, 
with cables passing through the cable collar. The cable plugs are a 
tight fit!
Temperature sensor
Inside temperature
Outside 
temperature