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FORUMS General Gear Talk Flash and Studio Lighting 
Thread started 11 Jan 2009 (Sunday) 13:06
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WEIN 5008 - Oh Great Ones, did I buy a pig in a poke ?

 
Scott ­ Vogan
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Jan 11, 2009 13:06 |  #1

Just got a fabulous deal on a Wein WP-5008 flash meter. Grand total of 20 bucks shipped... off of eBay.

Now...... it was a last minute purchase to go towards my strobist work, did I totally screw up ?

I know this is OLD stuff..... but I really thought that it would still work for digital flash work..... I hope !

I used one years ago of my dads.... seemed to work fine, not sure if it was the same model or not...

This one is "SUPPOSEDLY" a solid 9.5 on a scale of 10 for condition... says the seller....... or is it the spider to the fly....

ANY comments.......

Thanks............ Scott


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Titus213
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Jan 11, 2009 16:04 |  #2

The one I'm finding - still available at Adorama for $89 (external link) - is an analog meter. I've never used one and don't know how it would give you a reading for flash.

The price was great!:lol:


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cdifoto
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Jan 11, 2009 16:06 |  #3

Incident only so no it won't help you with your strobistfication.


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Jim ­ M
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Jan 11, 2009 16:11 |  #4

Do you mean WP-500B? As I recall, they measured the flash, then you made aperture settings based on ISO and a chart on the back. I'm not sure how the 500B differs from the 500, but if it works, use it. I think it would measure ambient as well, but it presumed 1/60 sec shutter speed. (I see the 500B presumes 1/250) I suppose they were pretty hard to kill since there are plenty of them on eBay. It's just a basic incident flash meter. It measures the light when it is on and sees a flash. It relies on your brain to do anything fancier. I got an old WP-500 for free thrown in with some stuff I bought. I played with it for a few days to make sure it worked, then gave it to someone who didn't have a flash meter.




  
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Jim ­ M
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Jan 11, 2009 16:16 |  #5

cdifoto wrote in post #7054121 (external link)
Incident only so no it won't help you with your strobistfication.

Are you confusing incident with ambient? It does measure flash, but not as a reflected light meter.




  
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cdifoto
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Jan 11, 2009 16:26 |  #6

Jim M wrote in post #7054196 (external link)
Are you confusing incident with ambient? It does measure flash, but not as a reflected light meter.

D'oh! bw!

Adorama even has it listed as an "Incident Flash Meter" :rolleyes: @ myself.


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Jim ­ M
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Jan 11, 2009 16:31 |  #7

Think nothing of it. I made a mistake once, myself. (Ahem!)




  
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cdifoto
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Jan 11, 2009 16:35 |  #8

I blame lack of coffee, even though I've had 3 cups today.


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Scott ­ Vogan
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Jan 11, 2009 20:02 as a reply to  @ cdifoto's post |  #9

Well, the post said 5008.. don't know myself, I either just blew 20 bucks or got a good deal.

So, if one were to purchase a flash meter, what one would one reccommend.....

Here is the picture on the eBay ad, doen't look like a stock photo, so I am assuming it is of the one I did purchase.

IMAGE NOT FOUND
HTTP response: NOT FOUND | MIME changed to 'text/html'


Thanks for your help !!!

Scott.

Scott A. Vogan - Vogan Photography
Dual Canon 40-D's -1 Gripped - Canon EF-S 17-55mm f/2.8 IS USM - Sigma APO 70-200mm f/2.8 EX DG HSM - Dual Canon 580EX-II Speedlite - AltoDigital Flip/Flash Bracket - Lumiquest ProMax System - Radio Poppers PX
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cdifoto
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Jan 11, 2009 20:05 |  #10

I have a Sekonic L-358 but it cost a helluva lot more than 20 Benjis.


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Titus213
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Jan 11, 2009 20:29 |  #11

Sekonic L-358 here. It does far more than I'll ever need. But it was 12x the price of yours.

Scott Vogan wrote in post #7055606 (external link)
Well, the post said 5008.. don't know myself, I either just blew 20 bucks or got a good deal.

So, if one were to purchase a flash meter, what one would one reccommend.....

Here is the picture on the eBay ad, doen't look like a stock photo, so I am assuming it is of the one I did purchase.

Thanks for your help !!!

Scott.

That's the same one for sale at Adorama....


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DerekW
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Jan 11, 2009 20:30 |  #12

Ah well, it's only $20, if it doesn't work, then it's nothing to WEIN about
hahahahehehehohoho, I kill me :P




  
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Jim ­ M
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Jan 11, 2009 21:52 |  #13

Scott Vogan wrote in post #7055606 (external link)
So, if one were to purchase a flash meter, what one would one reccommend.....

Scott.

It really depends on what you want to do. If you like buying old stuff on eBay and you don't mind analog, a used Gossen LunaPro F would be a reasonable meter for very few dollars if you don't just go nuts in a bidding war. Before they came out with the LunaPro F, I bought a LunaPro SBC with a flash attachment and it's still going strong. I bought it new when it was the hot deal more years ago than I care to imagine. I almost wish it would give up so I would have an excuse to by a shiny new toy.

I'd see how you like the Wein. With digital, you can futz around with electronic "Polaroids" to fine tune things and the Wein should get you to a good place to start futzing.




  
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FlashZebra
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Jan 12, 2009 01:17 |  #14

I have used a Wein 500B on older studio type flash units many times and it nets very good exposure information.

I recall from the manual that it expect a flash duration of about 1/500 second, that is close to older studio flash gears flash duration. But many newer studio flash units and definitely hotshoe based flash units are magnitudes faster than this.

So, I am unsure if the accuracy I enjoyed with the older studio flash gear would transfer to newer gear.

I recall testing the Wein 500B against several high dollar units in a side by side match up and the Wein was just as accurate as meters costing 10 times more (again using older studio flash gear).

Enjoy! Lon


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TomBrooklyn
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Oct 05, 2010 20:32 as a reply to  @ FlashZebra's post |  #15

So, how'd it work out? Does it have any limitations relative to what you want to do?




  
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WEIN 5008 - Oh Great Ones, did I buy a pig in a poke ?
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