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FORUMS General Gear Talk Flash and Studio Lighting 
Thread started 07 Feb 2006 (Tuesday) 22:06
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multiple flashes into safe sync?

 
dietcookie
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Feb 07, 2006 22:06 |  #1

Is it ok for me to connect three flashes into a wein safe sync into my 10D? I know of course they work for one but I haven't read anything about multiple flashes yet.. thanks

ps it'll be two vivitar 285HV and a canon 550ex


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SkipD
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Feb 07, 2006 23:04 |  #2

dietcookie wrote:
Is it ok for me to connect three flashes into a wein safe sync into my 10D? I know of course they work for one but I haven't read anything about multiple flashes yet.. thanks

ps it'll be two vivitar 285HV and a canon 550ex

It's not a good idea to connect various flash units, particularly those of different designs, in parallel. Connect one to the camera and use optical slaves for the others.


Skip Douglas
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dietcookie
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Feb 08, 2006 03:02 |  #3

How good do the peanut slaves work?


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tim
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Feb 08, 2006 04:15 as a reply to  @ dietcookie's post |  #4

dietcookie wrote:
How good do the peanut slaves work?

I have lots of peanut slaves in my peanut army, they're small but effective if you have enough of them. I send them into battle with the chocolate army and eat the casualties.


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Jon
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Feb 09, 2006 13:45 as a reply to  @ dietcookie's post |  #5

dietcookie wrote:
How good do the peanut slaves work?

Which brand? Are we still talking Wein here, as several companies make "peanut" slaves?


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dietcookie
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Feb 11, 2006 05:33 as a reply to  @ Jon's post |  #6

Jon wrote:
Which brand? Are we still talking Wein here, as several companies make "peanut" slaves?

Yes wein.


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SkipD
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Feb 11, 2006 06:33 |  #7

The plain (NOT the "digital" version) Wein Peanut slave works just great. I have several that I use on the ends of PC cords to allow different flash units to be able to "see" the primary flash going off when the built-in optical slaves are positioned wrong.

The "digital" Peanut slave that I own, however, is quite useless to me. I could go into depth about that, but the bottom line is that they have to be used with an automated primary flash (ETTL or equivalent) that emits a pre-flash for exposure calculation. The flash being slaved by the "digital" Peanut is unknown to the camera and/or the primary ETTL flash unit, and will very likely cause overexposure in the image when it goes off in sync with the primary flash unit's main flash.


Skip Douglas
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Titus213
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Feb 11, 2006 14:59 as a reply to  @ tim's post |  #8

tim wrote:
I have lots of peanut slaves in my peanut army, they're small but effective if you have enough of them. I send them into battle with the chocolate army and eat the casualties.

Sounds like you need a few more days away...:lol:


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lostdoggy
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Feb 11, 2006 15:02 as a reply to  @ tim's post |  #9

tim wrote:
I have lots of peanut slaves in my peanut army, they're small but effective if you have enough of them. I send them into battle with the chocolate army and eat the casualties.

Is that how we end up w/ gobbers




  
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dietcookie
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Feb 19, 2006 13:22 |  #10

I just used it on a shoot yesterday. I didn't use any optical slaves just had (2) vivitar 285s and a 550ex all connected to my 10D with sync cords. worked perfectly fine.


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SkipD
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Feb 19, 2006 19:30 as a reply to  @ dietcookie's post |  #11

dietcookie wrote:
I just used it on a shoot yesterday. I didn't use any optical slaves just had (2) vivitar 285s and a 550ex all connected to my 10D with sync cords. worked perfectly fine.

That's not a good idea. You could possibly damage the camera's switching circuits depending on the combined current draw of all the flash units. It is MUCH better to connect only one flash to the camera and slave the rest. It's your decision, but please consider the camera's safety.


Skip Douglas
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multiple flashes into safe sync?
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