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Chris Ross

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  1. The standard approach to deal with this as I recall is adjusting the handle in and out to get to a comfortable setting. I don't have this particular housing to judge but the way you are holding it seems odd, probably just the way it has been photographed, typically I wrap by 3 non-index fingers around the handle, extend the index finger for the shutter lever and the BBF lever falls under my thumb. It looks like your palm is well back from the handle, mine is in tight contact- when holding for shooting. My hands aren't as supple as they once were so I vary my grip and periodically hold with my left hand while stretching my right and adopt a looser hold when travelling as opposed to shooting. To be it looks like if you gripped tighter with the palm tight to the handle you could reach more easily. Combine that a looser hold and resting stretching your right hand when not shooting would be my initial thoughts. Experiment with moving the handle in and out as well if our housing accommodates this.
  2. Yes camera needs to be set to manual and the strobe the same, the pre-flash chews up too much flash power responding to pre-flash at higher powers meaning it can't fire the main flash. It's not a sync issue - you need the camera on manual flash when the strobe is on manual.
  3. Nice work Ben, I saw their relatives in Lembeh a couple of weeks ago, indeed quite tiny. Impressive keeping it in focus during the swim.
  4. TTL or manual? If it's manual it seems like perhaps you have the camera emitting a pre-flash and it takes some of the strobe power when it fires on the pre-flash and at higher powers there is not enough charge to fire the main flash. Which setting are you using on the strobe, see if it behaves differently in one lightning bolt vs 2 bolts setting. You can test is it is pre flashing if you can set second curtain sync in camera then take a test shot at a slow 1/2 - 1 sec shutter speed. If the camera allows this the preflash goes off at beginning of exposure and main flash goes off 1/2 - 1 second later at end of exposure. By using a slow enough shutter speed you can see both flashes . In manual you should only see a single flash, if it is being cancelled properly, This is only to test if the strobe is firing a pre-flash to assist with trouble shooting.
  5. I use the standard 4 battery set up diving at home from the shore in Sydney, I average 70-80 shots over a 70-75 minute dive (I have to find my own critters) and I do a single dive. The 4 battery setup will last for 3 dives before needing charging. It's a 30 metre climb up from the waters edge as well, so I feel every gram, but seriously it's good enough, so I keep the boosters for dive trips where I have guides finding things for me and I do 100-110 frames per dive, 3 dives per day and it will need batteries charged every other day,
  6. Hi there, I upgraded to Retra a few months back. I got the reduction rings and the white diffusers. Previously using the Z240 strobes. I'm on m43 so I shoot at f10 mostly on macro. I recently did a trip to Lembeh with them. I can offer a few observations. The reduction rings I would suggest are essential. Shooting in Sydney and then in Lembeh I immediately noticed a lot less backscatter using the retra with reduction rings used at a fairly standard 10 and 2 strobe position close to the port. You do need to adjust positioning some more when getting in really close to somewhat non standard positions at least compared to what I used prior. Simplest seemed to turn the strobes in a little. I work fairly close with the olympus 60mm macro , so longer lenses would be less prone until you venture into wet diopters as the working distance is greater. It wasn't backscatter proof as such, just a lot less compared to what I saw with the INON strobes. I also tried some inward lighting and that worked well. The booster is quite useful. Shooting at f10 and one click past 25% power (this is a Retra pure) I got about 600 shots and the the battery test LED was hovering on turning yellow at the end. This was 3 dives a day over two days each dive about 1 hour 5 minutes. So I only pulled batteries and re-charged every other day. More powerful models may go through batteries faster if you use the power. Likewise is you are shooting at f11-16 on full frame you will need more power. This was all macro work. Classic HSS usage for wide angle is a sunball, where you might want to use 1/320 - 1/500 range for shutter speeds. I have not done much wide angle work with mine as yet, only used with 60mm macro and now with the MFO-3 so far. I traveled with the standard battery caps with the boosters separate, basically to improve my packing , with the booster the strobes were too tall for my backpack. Hope that helps, let me know if you have questions.
  7. try this if the link above doesn't work, any boating store would have one: Marine Supplies DirectOutboard Fuel Primer Bulb 3/8&34; 95mm"HI. TECH" primer bulb suitable for outboard engines for any horse power.
  8. I recall seeing a few posts on this possibly on Wetpixel??? most seems to be some kind of sock that is strapped around the assembly. On land the solution would be a blower bulb to blow particles away. If there was someway to attach a tube to the air release ring you could use a large syringe to push water through the opening, and you could presumably rig up a filter for the water. Without seeing the ring in person, it's hard to judge if this is feasible. If you could attach something like this ( a primer for outboard fuel supply) with a filter on the suction it might work: https://www.whitworths.com.au/outboard-fuel-primer-bulb-premium-6mm
  9. In general terms depth of field varies with magnification at the same f stop. Focal length does not impact DOF apart from changes it makes to the magnification achieved. The background blur does change with focal length at the same magnification with shorter focal lengths showing more detail for want of a better word in the out of focus background, while a long focal length produces a smoother backgroud. However when talking about macro lenses with diopters the only real variable if magnification once you have selected your f stop as the focal length doesn't move very much. It appears that some wet optics can produce less depth of field with a specific example being the fisheye conversion port, likley related to how it interacts with the virtual image. A Diopter however basically just allows a lens to focus closer and the SMC lenses have optics to correct distortions caused by the air-water interface, but this is a fairly monor adjustment and I can't see it impacting depth of field.
  10. You would need 7 1/2 Stix jumbo floats at 180 gr each, so if your arms are short you might need 2 each side to fit them. 4 STIX jumbo floats are 57 Euro at one store in Europe I saw while the INON mega float is 70 Euro, You might be up for another arm with STIX potentially but the INON float arm is an arm so you won't need another one, so very little difference in cost.
  11. You should be able to access ISO 50 - it's called extended ISO, by default the camera goes to ISO 100, but enabling extended ISO alllows one stop lower and one stop higher to accessed, you need to menu dive to enable it. This video explains: Going to ISO 50 will reduce dynamic range slightly but it might be worth trying it out - in most cases UW you don't need very wide dynamic range. The MF-2 would also be worth trying out.
  12. I would expect you would need to play every card to try to use this strobe under the conditions you are mentioning, You should be able to to ISO 50 I think and perhaps you need to close down a stop on your lens? You could also try reducing output using the widest angle diffuser on the strobe. This is a downside of using a very powerful strobe, it's harder to turn down. I would guess that what the strobe is doing is running at a set frequency for the duration the shutter is open and probably does that so it can work with any HSS system as the HSS protocols are likely different for each camera manufacturer.
  13. whatever you do read the fine print, you often need to specify high value items as the value of individual items is limited often to a relatively low value and a great many policies will exclude water damage to electronics. Also any advice is country specific, you can only buy insurance for gear in your country of residence and for example credit card based insurance will have different T&Cs in different countries and home insurance may be a good option in the USA but not in the UK, the devil is in the details and unfortunately buried deep within the terms and conditions document.
  14. The other consideration with video is stability, I guess the GoPro has decent stabilisation, but giving it less to do is probably a good thing. So this means getting the trim right as well, having the rig trying to twist up is a problem and it far easier to keep steady if you don't have to resist that torque. I dived one time with a photo rig that was positive and the dome kept wanting to twist upwards, quite difficult to use. Similarly my wide angle rig uses lots of buoyancy in the arms and it's rather difficult to twist it upwards even though the rig itself was near neutral overall. My rig is always clipped off and close to neutral so if I let it go it sinks quite slowly. I think a 1.36 kg rig could definitely benefit from some buoyancy. If 1.36kg is correct two of the INON 650gram mega float arms would be about perfect.
  15. Found it on Camera Pro, mentions it is internal fcous. It does have lots of external switches, hopefully accessing them wont be required UW. The pre-release price is $AUD 2599! Not many specs listed on their page.

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