Flash changing shutter speed.

Dino f

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Dean Feltimo
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Okay, probably being dumb here, but here goes.
I wanted to take a photo of someone against a blue sky.
I metered for the bright sky, and wanted to use a bit of fill to lighht the face up. The camera was on manual, 1/4000 @ f2.8 iso 100.
When i used the flash, i set it to 1/4 power, i didnt want to blow outthe face, but the camera kept changint the shutter speed to its max sync speed 1/250, thus blowing everything out. :bang:
Ant ideas, im sure ive not had this problem before on manual.
Dean:)
 
FP???
 

FP mode is high-speed synch mode. It will need to be engaged on the flash to allow shooting with the flash at more than 1/200 (or 1/250 or whatever your camera's synch speed is). If it's not engaged, the camera will limit the shutter speed.
 
I dig what youre saying MB, but i was exposing for the scene, and using the flash on 1/4 power, it made no difference when i went down to 1/64 power. If everything is on manual, then it should work to my settings, regardless of what the exposure will turn out like.
Dean:)
 
FP mode is high-speed synch mode. It will need to be engaged on the flash to allow shooting with the flash at more than 1/200 (or 1/250 or whatever your camera's synch speed is). If it's not engaged, the camera will limit the shutter speed.

Oh hi speed, no it wasnt on, maybe ill give that a go, but see my above post, manual should do what i want it to.
Dean:)
 
The flash cannot light the scene in 1/4000th of a second. The shutter needs to be fully open (not a slit passing across the sensor) for the flash to cover the whole scene - hence the sync speed limit. If the flash has a high speed sync mode then you can use any shutter speed as the flash makes a burst of flashes to light the whole scene many times as the shutter slit passes the sensor.... least that's how I think it works :)
 
You forgot to set the flash to High speed
 
Cheers Guys, will have another play tomorrow:thumbs:
Dean:)
 
Why dont you do the same as before, but instead of 1/4000 and F2.8

Why not 1/200 and something like F9, 11, or 15 even?
 
Cheers for the suggestios guys,
Jamie- i wanted to shoot at 2.8 to throw the bg out of focus alot.
I did a few tests, and hs flash does work, its just not what i expected/ wanted to do, but hey ho.
Cheers
Dean:)
 
Put an ND4 on the camera that will allow you to meter to scene at 1/250th, iso100, f2.8. Thats within the sync speed so then you just need to dial in more power to the flashes to compensate.
 
Dino, forgive me if you've got this, but you seem a bit confused.

The problem is your camera has a focal plane shutter (google) like all DSLRs. You cannot use regular flash with this type of shutter at speeds shorter than 1/250sec (often longer) or you only get part of the picture exposed, so modern cameras lock you out of faster speeds with flash.

Some top-end flash guns have an FP (focal plane) or High Speed mode which pulses the flash rapidly, effectively turning into a continous light source for the brief time the shutter takes to function. If your flash does not have this function, you cannot use shutter speeds shorter than 1/250sec and must eithjer use a higher f/number, or an ND filter, as has been suggested, to get your shutter speed longer than 1/250sec.

FP/High Speed flash is great for the kind of thing you're trying to do, but it uses a lot of power and flash distance range is reduced.
 
The following dslrs will flash sync well past 1/250 - Nikon D1/D40/D50/D70/D70s and Canon 1D

Corrected. They go to 1/500sec by clever switching of the CCD sensor (CMOS won't do it). To be honest I didn't think any present cameras had this feature but the Nikon D40 is still current.
 
Corrected. They go to 1/500sec by clever switching of the CCD sensor (CMOS won't do it). To be honest I didn't think any present cameras had this feature but the Nikon D40 is still current.

The D40 will flash sync to 1/4000 and the D70/s to 1/8000 if you know how...
 
Okay, probably being dumb here, but here goes.
I wanted to take a photo of someone against a blue sky.
I metered for the bright sky, and wanted to use a bit of fill to lighht the face up. The camera was on manual, 1/4000 @ f2.8 iso 100.
When i used the flash, i set it to 1/4 power, i didnt want to blow outthe face, but the camera kept changint the shutter speed to its max sync speed 1/250, thus blowing everything out. :bang:
Ant ideas, im sure ive not had this problem before on manual.
Dean:)

You kinda answered your own question here buddy :)

Set your flash to E-TTL, enable high speed sync and re-shoot. Used to do fill in the sun with my 40D all the time:

1/2500s:
2545813892_a48c645b26.jpg


1/2000:
2544990001_06ae1ae0ed.jpg


E-TTL with FEV at -2 :)
 
The D40 will flash sync to 1/4000 and the D70/s to 1/8000 if you know how...

Do they? Without an FP flash gun? :thinking: I'd appreciate a link on that if you've got one. Thanks.
 
Do they? Without an FP flash gun? :thinking: I'd appreciate a link on that if you've got one. Thanks.

The D40 might operate the shutter electronically like a p&s by turning on and off the sensor to reach the higher speeds, which would allow you a high speed shutter sync as the whole frame would be exposed at once.

No idea if it does but thats the only way I could see it working. (Something tells me the original 1D was like that too?)
 
The D40 might operate the shutter electronically like a p&s by turning on and off the sensor to reach the higher speeds, which would allow you a high speed shutter sync as the whole frame would be exposed at once.

No idea if it does but thats the only way I could see it working. (Something tells me the original 1D was like that too?)

Yes, I think that's how it's done. But I thought they still only got up to 1/500sec, which is why I'd like to know more.
 
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