funk1196 wrote in post #6236052
What determines the flash output on a speedlite when using E-TTL?
Does the camera determine the flash output and send it to the flash, or does the flash determine the output on its own?
funk1196 wrote in post #6236229
so is the flash output not relative to the aperture/iso/shutter speed? it just does its own thing?
and in a dark situation, how are u supposed to tell how your image is going to come out if you dont let the camera work on P for a few shots? won't the flash look different depending on what aperture/SS you choose?
The camera, after talking with the flash(es), determines E-TTL exposure. It knows its own settings and those of the flashes and takes those settings into account. As long as the flash is on-camera, or the Infra-red communication link is working.
The camera instructs the flash (either the flash by itself or in Master Mode) what light level is required according to its calculations. The Master instructs any Slave flashes according to its settings, such as the Ratio facility.
The 580EX II flash is the only Canon flashlite at present that has a built-in exposure sensor - but forget that at this stage!
When you have E-TTL flashes set up, the camera makes the usual exposure evaluation, and then tells the flashes to fire a pre-flash (at low power) so that - the camera - can take another "with flash" exposure reading. It then compares the two in fine detail, and arrives at the required exposure after taking account of the Flash Exposure Compensation (FEC) setting. The flash is then told to fire, and at what lighting level. All this paragraph happens so fast we rarely notice the preflash - the camera's processor is very fast.
Trust the camera, more or less, and see what you get. Use FEC if needed; change settings, go full manual not only on the camera but on the flashes themselves.
Each shutter-press is evaluated from fresh data. But slight changes, say if you zoom in slightly, can produce a different evaluation and result in a different combined exposure.
By the way, shutter speed is always slower than the flash speed, so it has no effect on the flash lighting.