

- Setting up yongnuo 622n for nikon supersync manual#
- Setting up yongnuo 622n for nikon supersync full#
There is no loss of power from the speedlight what happens is more and more of the light, the power is *wasted* on the shutter curtains and less and less get through the slit and falls on the image sensor or film. As the shutter speed rises that moving slit become narrower and narrower. At speeds above the X-sync speed, the highest speed where the first curtain is fully open and the second curtain hasn't started its travel are formed with a moving slit.

The shutter speeds above 1/320th, 1/250th or 1/200th depending on the camera are the elapsed time between the first and second shutter curtain. The Auto FP mode doesn't loose power it wastes power. The duration of the bright light emitted was long as early 35mm focal plane shutters had a X-sync of 1/60 or slower. What this does is simulate the slow burn of an old time FP flash bulb. If we are talking about slow burst speed with a Nikon 7200 then the Nikon term is Auto FP (Auto Focal Plane). In terms of flash re-cycling, I think we are back to the point quackator2000 was making. The last two frames indicate that your Speedlite is operating at its longest duration M power setting - it may even be pulsing.
Setting up yongnuo 622n for nikon supersync manual#
I have been having some issues getting an even luminosity across the frame using any of the manual settings. The flash power lost about 1 stop of light going from 1/250s to 1/500s.īTW, SS auto setting on the TX seems to create a smoother or even luminosity than manually setting the value. However, the flash measured by the flash meter hasn't changed from 1/500s to 1/1600s. The shots are somewhat underexposed as the higher shutter speed is being used. Flash power measured by the flash meter is the same as before. SS mode at the default setting 2.1 1/1000s. Flash power lost about 1 stop of light, at f5.6 SS mode at the default setting 2.1 1/500s. SS mode at the default setting 2.1 1/250s. Test setting.Tamron 70-200 vc with a Nikon D7200. The yongnuo RF603II can sync up to 1/320s remotely. 1/500s is even doable with only 10% clipping at the bottom.as long as the flash is on my shot shoe.
Setting up yongnuo 622n for nikon supersync full#
You don't believe Yongnuo SS can work at power level lower than 1/1? Even with my yn560 III, a fully manaul flash, I can get full flash sync at 1/400s. Possibly keep the ambient low so that the flash contribution is easy to determine. Maybe show us an image of what you are capturing with the Speedlite set to M 1/4 with the trigger saying 'SS' - offset to default. 5, the black bar is gone.up to 1/1000s or higher. I can adjust the offset timing and I would immediately see the clipping, higher, when the default setting is 2.1. It has to be genuinely because the Mode in Group A is SS. Something doesn't compute (and it may be a nomenclature thing.

Somehow we are at crossed purposes because a Speedlite will never fill the frame at anything other than 1/1 full power if it is genuinely operating under 'Supersync'. It can recycle any speedlite at full power in 1 sec. I don't think my recycle time is the issue because my Yongnuo is connected to a Lumedyne mega ultra cycler. The camera burst speed is unaffected, but the flash will not fire every time. Super sync (aka Hypersync copy) and HSS eat a lot of power and typically will prolong recycle times a lot. Not sure about having my burst speed reduced a little. I shoot a lot of cycling race photography and I am planning to use super sync a lot shooting these races. Offset is set to Auto.which is pretty good. yn685ex in group A and in SS mode on the TX. Do you get slower burst speed shooting in super sync mode? My setup is yn685ex N and yn622n tx.
