Thanks Gary
I think I asked the question properly but I will try to rephrase it just is case I didn't
Just been watching a video with someone using a ProPhoto D1 head and I noticed that when he turned up the modelling light, the light was giving the same output as when he fired the flash if this makes sense
TBH. Profoto and Elinchrom are notable exceptions where the proportional mode tracks the relative brightness of the flash output accurately.
Interesting that Elinchrom is fairly accurate because I think these are cheaper to buy than ProPhoto. Do you know if its just the high end models of the Elinchrom which offer this option
Yes, this is the limitation with proportional modelling lamps - different models of differing flash power are typically fitted with the same modelling lamps.All Elinchroms, including D-Lites, but with multiple lights you need them all to be the same model.
In the old days checks were done using Polaroid, you can do the same with digital. Hook it up to a laptop and you can work very fast.I am thinking in terms of 5x4 and was thinking along the lines of being able to see the light in proportion to the flash power. Didn't want to end up wasting TRI-X especially at £2.50 a sheet
As close as what you see on the ground glassThanks Phil. Do you reckon, what you see on the digital camera will be close to how film renders the scene