RDKirk wrote:
Quote:
If I do that blindly by just decreasing the power on the E640 to where it says f/4
It would never do that. First, to get a smaller aperture, you would have to increase the power of the flash unit. To get a larger aperture, you would decrease the power of the flash, but if the ambient exposure is f/2.8, the "warning" would be that the meter would never suggest an aperture larger than f/2.8.
I think you misunderstood what I was saying (it perhaps wasn't so clear). What I was trying to say is that if I'm metering a *total* exposure at f/5.6 with an ambient contribution of f/2.8. *Then* if I decrease my exposure from f/5.6 to f/4.0, does the CC know how much was contributed by ambient? Paul answered that question above, with a "no" (albeit not directly, but none-the-less, I believe that conclusion is valid). It is metering both together and doesn't take a separate reading to be able to subtract the ambient out, which is basically the feature I was asking for since I shoot 90% outdoors where ambient is a major factor. It's not a *huge* deal, but I do loose the simple ability to be able to dial down the power accurately without remetering (or as Paul said, doing my own math, but I stink at doing math in my head). So I just revert to my old ways and remeter (or pop test shots and compare histograms) when making all but very minor adjustments. Still saves me walking and with the Einsteins it saves the constant lowering of lights to be able to see the back and adjust and then raising them back up. Pretty major win in that alone:-)
EDIT: Paul, what you said about metering ambient alone, then ambient plus flash is *exactly* the feature I'd like to see. It could also use a separate channel to track the ambient part as a built-in as well since, as you said, it's part of every exposure regardless. Being able to meter just ambient is nice, but it's way more nice to have the math automatically done for me with regard to total EV for each channel when I want to start changing power settings.