cameraperson wrote in post #12544547
Someone asked me to look at a Sunpak 511 they inherited. The flash works but one of the dials on the side is very hard to turn. In the middle you set the asa film speed and on the outer part you put the f-number, while in auto.
I have, and still use, a 511. In its day it was a fab flash. On the dial, when you set the ASA you cannot move the aperture setting lower than it's minimum; otherwise, it should be fairly easy to turn the dial.
I wanted to know if this actually changes the flash output somehow of it this is just a guide?
The flash uses auto thyristor circuitry, so the different colors tell you the aperture to use. As you change the ASA setting, the aperture corresponding to the different colors change as well. If, for example, it tells you f/5.6, then you need to shoot in manual with your aperture set to f/5.6. (You can also shoot aperture priority auto exposure, but you also have to set the aperture at f/5.6 - or perhaps f/8 if you're doing fill).
edit: I figured this out but isn't it doing the same thing if I turn the power setting on full to 1/64?
The flash ratio setting is in manual mode. Remember, this flash can either do manual (in which case you have to measure distance to subject and calculate f-stops) or in auto thyristor mode that uses the sensor on the front of the flash to determine when to shut off the flash. With auto thyristor, the flash determines the illumination duration. In TTL the camera determines illumination duration. TTL is better, but thyristors certainly can get the job done.
"Raw" is not an acronym, abbreviation, nor a proper noun; thus, it should not be in capital letters.