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						 Color temperature and "tint" are both statements of color shift from ideal. Color temperature is the blue yellow balance and "tint" is the red green axis. Big errors from neutral in either axis are more or less equally visible. Don't ask me why it's structured this way, or why they are specified differently but they been for probably 75 years. All flash units have some amount of R/G axis shift and most have significant amounts of B/Y shift (color temperature).
  If it helps, AB and Elinchrom RX series are essentially identical in both axis at a given power setting. Profoto D1 has more shift in both axis, and D! has about 900°K higher native color temperature than the previous Compact series . . . about 6000° vs 5100°.
  Most speedlights are close to 6000° at full power and rise as power is reduced.
  Einstein is right on 5600° at the flashtube, but the frosted dome drops this to typically 5400°. This is actually good because the 5400° is a near perfect for AB, WL and Elinchrom non-IGBT units set in the middle of their power range.
  With any flash you can expect another 200° or so drop in color temperature when bouncing or shooting through unbleached Nylon or Polyester fabrics (good fabrics). Bleached "brightened" white fabric such as Westcott fake PLMs use bleached white fabrics and fluoresce a lot and produce rather blue/magenta casts and well higher than 6000° color temperatures depending on the amount of UV emitted by the particular flash. Einstein, WL and AB tubes are UV coated, and the Einstein frosted dome offers further UV reduction, thus produce quite low levels of unwanted UV emission.
  But keep in mind that natural light photography has a very wide range of color temperature and R/G axis difference coming from cloud diffusion (blue) and various color casts caused by the ground environment . . . trees, grass, houses, etc. So 2000° color differences from one side of a subject to the other are not uncommon, and often create interest rather than being considered a defect. 
					
					 
					
					    
						      
						 
					
  
					
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