Hi there. ive kind of set my mind getting either the gemini pro 1000 watt or the 1500 watt. Can anyone tell if these are allready avaliable on the market and does anyone by chance use these heads . Thanks
What are you shooting?
Pop quiz question.. What's the difference in f-stops between 300W, 600W and 1200W?
What are you shooting?
Pop quiz question.. What's the difference in f-stops between 300W, 600W and 1200W?
Good point and good question. There are a couple of U.S. companies who use the marketing hype 'effective watt seconds' to indicate that their low powered mono heads produce as much power as much bigger generator units.It's watt-seconds or joules, not watts, and is a measure of electrical power, not light. It also depends on capacitor efficiency and system efficiency Different brands vary, much less than they used to these days, but there's still a bit of artistic marketing with some. A bit like guide numbers.
Edit: I've never actually compared identical systems side by side with that kind of power variable. But it would be interesting to see if the light from a 1200ws head, fed by a power pack and HT lead with its inevitable losses, was indeed two stops brighter than a 300ws monolight of the same brand.
True, but not by very much.putting the iso up decreases the dynamic range of the camera...
Also true, buthigher ws means you can use get to use soft modifiers, could be the difference between using difusion panel or not, also means you dont need the light source to be so tight into the frame.. if you want to really control lighting with grids, they soon eat up stops of light.
Edit: I've never actually compared identical systems side by side with that kind of power variable. But it would be interesting to see if the light from a 1200ws head, fed by a power pack and HT lead with its inevitable losses, was indeed two stops brighter than a 300ws monolight of the same brand.
True, but not by very much.
Also true, but
1. That applies equally whether the flash energy is greater (higher j rating) or whether the ISO is adjusted to increase the effective flash energy
2. I'm constantly banging my head against the wall, trying to encourage people to use creative light shaping tools - but the fact remains that the vast majority of amateur photographers (plus a lot of pros) don't use them and seem to think that 'good' lighting is a couple of umbrellas or softboxes- for these photographers, high power is pretty well irrelevant.
I'm NOT saying that high power really is irrelevant and that nobody should spend money on powerful flash heads, all that I AM saying is that, for most people using modern digital cameras, it is nowhere near as important as it was just a couple of years ago. Sales figures of studio lighting equipment reflects this, with the vast majority of people buying, and perfectly happy with, 200 or 300j flash heads.
It's watt-seconds or joules, not watts, and is a measure of electrical power, not light. It also depends on capacitor efficiency and system efficiencyDifferent brands vary, much less than they used to these days, but there's still a bit of artistic marketing with some. A bit like guide numbers.
Edit: I've never actually compared identical systems side by side with that kind of power variable. But it would be interesting to see if the light from a 1200ws head, fed by a power pack and HT lead with its inevitable losses, was indeed two stops brighter than a 300ws monolight of the same brand.
I do know that, I was purposefully using exactly the same terminology as the OP...It's watt-seconds or joules, not watts, and is a measure of electrical power, not light. It also depends on capacitor efficiency and system efficiencyDifferent brands vary, much less than they used to these days, but there's still a bit of artistic marketing with some. A bit like guide numbers.
Edit: I've never actually compared identical systems side by side with that kind of power variable. But it would be interesting to see if the light from a 1200ws head, fed by a power pack and HT lead with its inevitable losses, was indeed two stops brighter than a 300ws monolight of the same brand.