Paul C. Buff, Inc. Technical Forum

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Wed Feb 23, 2011 1:01 am

Joined: Tue Feb 08, 2011 1:18 pm
Posts: 26

Another question.....or several from the newbie, apologizing if this has been covered. If so, and anyone has links to the answers, please post them.

I am anxiously awaiting the arrival of my first Einstein, supposedly going to be delivered Friday, and 64" While PLM and Vagabond Mini on Thursday. I can't wait to get them and try them out. The 2nd Einstein will be here at the end of March. I hope the black covers will be in by then.

Now for the questions:

1: I have been doing a lot of reading and keep reading something about "flash duration", especially in regards to "freezing" action when shooting sports or high speed subjects. What does it mean? I have a feeling that is probably a stupid question, but I love shooting sports and want to learn.

2: With that said, what sport can you actually use flash with? I would think the flashes would be VERY distracting to the participants and would not be allowed.

3: Now, a more "technical" question regarding this subject of "flash duration" and shooting high speed subjects. I have been reading posts that make it sound like the Einstein is THE BEST strobe on the market for what it can do at all power levels, etc, including it's fast flash duration, etc. I have a D700, and as I am sure most of you with more experience knows, the fastest I can set my shutter speed at is 1/250th of a second. Anyone that has shot any sports at all knows that 1/500th is the slowest you would ever want to go to prevent blur, and I usually shoot sports at 1/1000. I'm sure you know the question. How can I use my D700 and my Einstein to shoot sports, or anything moving "fast" and stop the motion without half the photo being black because of the sync speed? I have read posts that say you can get a flash duration of like 1/10,000th. I just don't get it. And again, what sports can you use flash with in the first place?

Thanks again. This forum is great.




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Wed Feb 23, 2011 11:09 am

Joined: Fri Nov 12, 2010 3:23 pm
Posts: 107

Here's an article with a lot of good info...http://www.robgalbraith.com/bins/multi_ ... 0053-10715




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Wed Feb 23, 2011 11:31 am

Site Admin
Joined: Tue Dec 08, 2009 10:43 am
Posts: 5266

First, most sports will allow flash. However, not all venues, leagues, or other controlling bodies will allow it. Basketball, volleyball, and hockey (i.e. mostly indoor sports) allow it due to the inherent low light situations. At typical height and distance, it is not that distracting (moms in the bleachers use thier flashes, albeit less powerful ones). Performers/players generally don't notice unless it is right in thier face.

As for the motion freezing. Motion is frozen based on the amount of time light is hitting the sensor. In a low light environment (gym), no measureable amount of light is hitting the sensor at 1/250 of a second at <ISO800, even at f2.8 (this can vary from gym to gym, but a pretty safe bet for HS gyms). Since there is no light, you cannot see any motion. Add in Einstein at 1/2000 t.1. Light is being introduced for only 1/2000 of a second, much like outside on a sunny day, using 1/2000 shutter speed introduces light to your sensor for 1/2000 of a second. Either way, measureable amounts of light are reaching the sensor for only 1/2000 of a second. Inside this 1/2000 happens to fall within the 1/250 the shutter is open.

Imagine walking through a haunted house with strobe lights. The mosnter walking toward you seems to move choppy. This is because the strobe effect is illuminating just a fraction of a second's worth of moving. The moster still makes the same smooth movement anything else does, but you can only see bits here and there. same principle.

Outside or other high ambient light situations, or if exposure settings allow for more ambient light (i.e. you can see an image with no flash used), the flash will illuminate as normal, but your ambient light will continue to illuminate for the full 1/250 of a second, thus limiting your action freezing to what 1/250 can do.

Also note, I stated the t.1 time for the Einstein example. This is important as most flash manufacturers state t.5 times. T.1 times are typically 3 times longer than t.5 times, and the amount of light given from t.5 to t.1 is significant enough to show blur. That is why Einstein is so good at freezing motion, because the IGBT shuts the light off instantly, making the t.1 and t.5 times virtually identical at most power settings (max power will still act much like an Alien Bee or White Lightning).

This link will help you understand t.1 and t.5 times. Please note, this was written before Einstein and Einstein defies these descripiton.
http://www.paulcbuff.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=59




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