yessammassey
Member
- Joined
- Dec 19, 2015
- Messages
- 145
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Things I've learned from basic observation, or asking others so far:
1.) It's a Vivitar flash. The kind you can plug in or use with batteries. The built in PC sync cord is nice. Now I have a flash that will work with my RB67.
2.) It has three modes, blue (for subjects up to 9ft away), orange (subjects up to 17ft away), and M (???)
3.) You set the ISO on the dial and it tells you what aperture to use to illuminate a subject at that distance. I guess if you're using M mode, you just figure the subject distance and set the aperture as indicated.
4.) Don't use it with an electronic camera!
Things I think I understand, but am not sure:
1.) Guide number is 64ft @ ISO100. So with ISO100 film at f/8, it would illuminate a subject 8ft away.. right?
2.) Flash output can vary... according to what color is set? Output on blue mode is less than output on orange? M is always full output? It varies output by duration of flash?
Things I've yet to figure out:
1.) I think I can calculate which aperture to use depending on ISO and subject distance, but how do I determine which shutter speed to use? My RB67 can sync at any speed. My FM can sync at 1/125 and below.
2.) Following from question 1: How do I use this flash to keep my shutter speed up in low-light conditions? Say I have a scene where the subject is 8ft away, and my meter gives 1/30 at ISO100 & f/8. Can I use the flash to bring up by shutter speed to 1/125 at f/8?
2.) Blue mode if for subjects up to 9ft away, while orange is for up to 17ft. Why is there no minimum distance for orange mode? Wouldn't it overexpose at closer distances, compared to the blue mode? That's assuming blue mode and orange mode have different output levels...
These might seem like basic questions, but I come from the land of digital cameras with TTL flash, and even then I use a lot of [shoot, look at image, adjust flash exposure compensation, shoot again, look again, adjust again] to dial in the look I want. I've never used flash enough to develop a real working knowledge of the principles behind it. I get the relationship between the aperture number and distances on the dial (and how illumination varies according to the squares of those numbers.. in a basic sense), but I've no practice in actually applying that information.