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Tassie Rohan

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Everything posted by Tassie Rohan

  1. Thanks for that Chris - that makes a lot of sense. After the preflash the camera requests the main flash as a multiplier (say x4 preflash). In RC the camera knows there is an external strobe and the strobe knows the preflash power, so the main exposure is accurate. In sTTL the camera assumes it firing its own flash and the strobe, which is significantly more powerful, has to guess what power to use to match. There is also the issue that the camera's trigger signal may be partially 'lost in translation' when firing the strobe. Cheers Rohan.
  2. Can someone explain to me why TTL exposure, such as Olympus RC, is better than slave sTTL? I recently stitched from an Inon (sTTL metering) to a Backscatter strobe (Olympus RC metering). While I normally shoot manual I have noticed RC works better than sTTL for the wide-angle work that I do. I would now like to understand: why? Unless I am missing something the process is functionally similar: sTTL: Camera is not aware of external strobe. Camera flash fires a single weak preflash. Strobe attempts to mimic the duration/strength of the pre flash. Camera calculates exposure/required flash duration assuming the more powerful strobes pre-flash came from its own flash. I assume the camera is measuring both pre flash and ambient light, and allowing for metering area (matrix, spot, etc). Camera fires flash for main exposure. Strobe attempts to mimic duration/strength of camera flash. RC/TTL: Camera is aware of external strobe. Strobe fires a weak pre-flash, or more likely, multiple pre-flashes. Camera calculates exposure based on the strobes pre-flash. This likely includes pre-flash and ambient light, and allows for metering area. Camera fires strobe for actual exposure. My understanding is that a mirrorless camera will not stop the flash or strobe when correct exposure is reached on the sensor in step 4 - the flash duration is set during step 3. Correct me if I'm wrong. During my reading on this I see a lot of vague comments such as ‘in TTL the camera talks to the strobe’, 'in TTL the camera is aware of the strobe and is properly metering the scene' or ‘sTTL is only based off pre flash strength’ but no actual concrete answer. So - what am I missing? Why is RC better, or alternatively, do you find both are similar? The only partial answer I’ve seen is that in sTTL the camera is firing blind: it is firing its own flash but seeing the light from the more powerful strobe and assumes it's from its own flash, while the sTTL strobe does not know what camera, flash or lens is being used, and is following a generic ratio/protocol in deciding what output should match the weaker camera flash. This can lead to underexposure in the final image due to the pre flash being too bright. I also assume it may lead to overexposure when the preflash was too weak/the subject too distant, but this would apply to both sTTL and RC. Hopefully someone can come along and explain the key differences between sTTL and RC to me (particularly in wide angle with a bright or dark background) as if I’m 5 years old. :-) Cheers Rohan
  3. I've just picked one up. The Atom's automatic mode used the Olympus remote control (RC) protocol. You don't need a Backscatter trigger if you have an Olympus/OM camera and Olympus RC-compatible flash: my EM5 iii has a FL-LM3 external flash that handles the camera RC/ strobe SC automatic mode fine. You do need the Backscatter Sony trigger if you use a Sony camera, or I'm guessing any third party trigger that converts your cameras signals to Olympus RC protocol. Regards Rohan
  4. Hi there all - time for me to report in from the beautiful temperate waters of Tasmania. I used to be fairly active on scubaboard, and a regular lurker on wetpix, under the same username. I look forward to contributing to this new community and helping it grow. Cheers, Rohan. Instagram: tassie.rohan

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