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Vivek Registered: Jan 24, 2003 Total Posts: 2468 Country: United States |
Hi wizards of the Canon world...
Thanks for all the answers in advance... -- Vivek |
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Beni Registered: May 31, 2005 Total Posts: 6952 Country: United Kingdom |
Auto flash outdoors has a very short range, it works from light reflected back from the subject and that gets diluted very fast outdoors. One of the nice things about ETTL II flash was finally getting both accurate fill outdoors whatever the distance and of course not being tied to X-sync and the resulting ND filters... |
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Gochugogi Registered: Jun 25, 2003 Total Posts: 7091 Country: United States |
The Nikon SB-30 is the smallest Auto-thyristor flash I've seen. It also has full manual power ratios and TTL (Nikon dedicated of course). It folds down and uses small lithium batteries. I've used it on my 5D a few times but found I prefer the E-TTL 220EX, although the Canon is larger.
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Vivek Registered: Jan 24, 2003 Total Posts: 2468 Country: United States |
Thanks Guys... |
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dhphoto Registered: Feb 16, 2003 Total Posts: 8073 Country: United Kingdom |
Metz 20-C2 |
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cgardner Registered: Nov 18, 2002 Total Posts: 7907 Country: United States |
Have you ever used an auto-thyristor flash? I suspect not because of your list of requirements including EV compensation. The way they work is the dial on the flash is set for the f/stop the camera is set on. If the exposure at those settings winds up not being correct you then need to either change camera aperture or the flash power setting. There is no "EV adjustment" on the flash and typically the auto settings are one f/stop apart. So to find tune exposure -- which is just as necessary with auto as any other mode based on scene reflectance - you wind up changing the aperture which affects DOF, an important creative variable. |
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Vivek Registered: Jan 24, 2003 Total Posts: 2468 Country: United States |
Chuck |
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mh2000 Registered: Oct 06, 2005 Total Posts: 7443 Country: United States |
if your flash has different level settings for A mode you can leave your aperture where you want it and adjust output by picking the A mode that is either over or under the aperture you have selected... that is kind of like EV correction... as is your ISO setting. |