Correct exposure when using external metering of 580EX II
Hi all,
I read from many sources that auto external metering of 580EX II will always under expose. Is there a way to correct this using manual external metering?
Let's say if I shoot with ISO 400, can i set the manual external metering to ISO 200 and get correct exposure?
Thank you.
Re: Correct exposure when using external metering of 580EX II
Hey,
I'm not really sure I understand your question. I can say that you can adjust your external flash(mounted on camera) with -2 exp to +2 exposure and retain the metering from the camera. If the 580 always underexposes, you could adjust it very easily by setting the exposure compensation to a standard where it doesn't underexpose.
I hope I helped you out a bit...
Jan
Re: Correct exposure when using external metering of 580EX II
Do you mean with the little sensor on the front of the 580? Why would you want to do that instead of ETTL?
Re: Correct exposure when using external metering of 580EX II
Heve you read this? [url="http://www.usa.canon.com/dlc/controller?act=GetArticleAct&articleID=946]http://www.usa.canon.com/dlc/controller?act=GetArticleAct&articleID=946[/url]
Depending on the camera model, external metering should work fine, but you need to experiment to learn the limitations.
I think this paragraph may answer your question.
Deliberately under- or over-exposing flash in External metering: Manual mode
If you want flash exposure to intentionally be greater or less, you have to do one of two things: set a different camera lens aperture than the one you’ve set on the back of the flash, or change the camera’s ISO to a different value than the one you reported to the speedlite.
In other words, if you take a picture with all flash settings matching the camera settings, and the first shot looks too dark, you can brighten flash exposure by:
1) Setting a wider lens aperture than what you set on the flash <span id="__firefox-findbar-search-id" style="display: inline; color: black; padding: 0pt;"](example: flash says f/8; you set the camera to f/5.6 to brighten exposure one stop).
2) Raise the camera’s actual ISO above what you’ve set on the flash <span id="__firefox-findbar-search-id" style="display: inline; color: black; padding: 0pt;"](again, to lighten the exposure, if the flash’s LCD panel is set to ISO 100, setting the camera’s ISO to 250 would deliberately over-expose by 1-1/3 stops).