Technical Support wrote:
For practical purposes, Wattseconds is accurate enough to compare one light to another, relatively. A 640Ws light will be roughly one stop brighter than a 320Ws light of another brand, all else being equal (a super cheap mystery light may not follow this as well, but quality lights should be close). However, that tells you nothing about how much light actually hits the subject.
Right, I follow you on this.
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Even if you did know exactly how much light was leaving the tube, you would then have to factor how that light was modified. A high intensity reflector will put much of that light on a small area. A wide reflector will spread it out over more area, reducing the intensity on any one area. A 7" reflector from one company, and a 7" reflector from another may have different spreads of light. Also, one 45 degree reflector may have a very sharp fall off (think, spotlight), while another may have a gradual feathering. The one with a sharp fall off will likely be more intense than the other. Different brands of softbox may have different transmissivity.
This is the type of data the continuous light manufacturers give. Obviously not for every scenario, but they tell you what to expect from the fixture unmodified, at different spot/flood focuses, at given distances (so you can see how quickly it falls off).
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The real way to determine output would be with testing. We have a fairly extensive chart of expected output and guide numbers for our various modifiers (at ISO100). This can be found here:
http://www.paulcbuff.com/output.phpAha! This is exactly what I was looking for, thank you. Somehow I missed it at the bottom of the product pages. According to the data, the B1600 does have a few more stops output than the 6kW HMI at the same distances. That's great news.
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However, this sounds like a set up used for outdoor daylight work. ISO 200, 1/200s, f/5.6 would yield an over exposed image, before the addition of the light. You will need an ND filter, lower ISO, or smaller aperture (or combo) to not over expose the image. With this overall reduction in light, the Bee will need to be moved closer, or use a higher output reflector.
I'm actually talking about lighting indoor shots, but by placing the strobe outside the windows and shooting them in through the windows onto the subject. The goal is to simulate natural sunlight in a controllable, repeatable way in a wide shot, where the windows are in the shot (so you can't just place the strobe indoors in front of the window because they would be in the frame). If shot during the day, there will be some soft ambient light coming in the window from the glow of the sky and reflecting off whatever is outside but it will not be nearly as bright as being outside. The strobe will be a harder, more directional source that simulates direct sunlight (in this scenario, the actual direct sunlight is either not coming in the window because of its position in the sky, or I am intentionally blocking it from coming in the window with flags because it is not coming in at the angle I want it. If it is at the angle I want it, I just shoot the shot with that.). The strobe outside will only have to fight the little bit of soft ambience that is coming in the window. I just metered an f/1 (ISO100, 1/125) about 4ft inside my window that has no direct sunlight, whereas B1600 at full power with high output reflector will read f/22 (ISO100, 1/125) at 10ft according to the Expected Output data. That gives me some wiggle room to move the strobe farther back and/or diffuse it and still shoot at a reasonable stop, which I wouldn't have been able to do with just the ambient light from the window.
I can then add a second strobe inside, bounced and/or diffused, on the opposite side of the subject to dial in however much fill I want.
Of course if I'm shooting close-ups, I could put the strobe inside at lower power, with thicker diffusion, etc.
So that's what I want to be able to do. That's the way I'm used to working for motion picture stuff and it makes sense to me. I'm not sure if many still photo people work that way, and I'm very willing to believe that there could be a simpler way that still photographers achieve this. That being said, I did work on one big commercial photo shoot where we used HMIs outside windows in this fashion. But basically I want to know if I can do it with strobes when I'm shooting personal work without a commercial budget and full crew.
Based on the data, it looks like this will work, but ultimately I guess I should probably rent some strobes for a day and test it out before buying.