fatphotographer
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- Name
- Gary
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Hi,
I was shooting a project with a pyrotechnic engineer yesterday, when he asked me if I could get a light measurement of the flash that I was photographing. I took a photographic light reading, but need to convert it back into a more industry accepted measurement ideally, candela.
So here is the situation, the explosion goes off, and we took a flash reading of f64 at ISO 100 at 4 meters, just as if it was a studio flash.
Im crap at puzzles, and I was off school the day we did algebra, but I am sure that there will be mathematicians, engineers or avid puzzlers who use the forum that could backward engineer the light reading to give the required value.
I had a quick look at http://www.mediacollege.com/lighting/measurement/ but decided to post it on here instead!
Rather than the O level answer of the answer is .. is there any chance that I could get the "GSCE type" answer of using the inverse square law .. as there is a good chance that I will need the equation again for the next shoot.
Any help would be greatly appreciated,
Thanks
Gary
I was shooting a project with a pyrotechnic engineer yesterday, when he asked me if I could get a light measurement of the flash that I was photographing. I took a photographic light reading, but need to convert it back into a more industry accepted measurement ideally, candela.
So here is the situation, the explosion goes off, and we took a flash reading of f64 at ISO 100 at 4 meters, just as if it was a studio flash.
Im crap at puzzles, and I was off school the day we did algebra, but I am sure that there will be mathematicians, engineers or avid puzzlers who use the forum that could backward engineer the light reading to give the required value.
I had a quick look at http://www.mediacollege.com/lighting/measurement/ but decided to post it on here instead!
Rather than the O level answer of the answer is .. is there any chance that I could get the "GSCE type" answer of using the inverse square law .. as there is a good chance that I will need the equation again for the next shoot.
Any help would be greatly appreciated,
Thanks
Gary