Slave Flash Vs Speedlight at David Percy blog

Slave Flash Vs Speedlight. If you only have nikon dslrs to use the flash with, then this won’t matter to you. This lets us set up and shoot these in remote or. As for commander and slave modes, those features work quite well as advertised. The optical slave worked ok, but it required line of sight. Slave modes work by triggering the flash when the sensor on the flash sees the light from another source, be it speedlight or studio strobe. The master is triggered directly by the camera. This is useful for triggering multiple flashes. One or more slaves are trigged not from the camera, but by the master. Previously in order to fire a flash remotely you would either need to use a cable which limited its use, or in some cases, the flash may have an optical slave (or infrared) built in, so that it would fire when it saw another flash go off (like perhaps the flash from your pop up flash).

PopUp Flashes vs. Speedlights David Molnar Your Photography Mentor
from davidmolnar.com

Slave modes work by triggering the flash when the sensor on the flash sees the light from another source, be it speedlight or studio strobe. Previously in order to fire a flash remotely you would either need to use a cable which limited its use, or in some cases, the flash may have an optical slave (or infrared) built in, so that it would fire when it saw another flash go off (like perhaps the flash from your pop up flash). One or more slaves are trigged not from the camera, but by the master. This is useful for triggering multiple flashes. If you only have nikon dslrs to use the flash with, then this won’t matter to you. The optical slave worked ok, but it required line of sight. As for commander and slave modes, those features work quite well as advertised. This lets us set up and shoot these in remote or. The master is triggered directly by the camera.

PopUp Flashes vs. Speedlights David Molnar Your Photography Mentor

Slave Flash Vs Speedlight As for commander and slave modes, those features work quite well as advertised. As for commander and slave modes, those features work quite well as advertised. Previously in order to fire a flash remotely you would either need to use a cable which limited its use, or in some cases, the flash may have an optical slave (or infrared) built in, so that it would fire when it saw another flash go off (like perhaps the flash from your pop up flash). This lets us set up and shoot these in remote or. Slave modes work by triggering the flash when the sensor on the flash sees the light from another source, be it speedlight or studio strobe. The optical slave worked ok, but it required line of sight. This is useful for triggering multiple flashes. One or more slaves are trigged not from the camera, but by the master. If you only have nikon dslrs to use the flash with, then this won’t matter to you. The master is triggered directly by the camera.

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