Originally posted by DrAchoo: So I've never quite understood this. If I'd like to use a shutter speed of 1/500th and use a flash to assist in the lighting I can do this by shooting with the flash set to the H with lightning bolt right? Is there any reason to think the picture will freeze any differently than if I were to simply shoot 1/500th without flash (assuming I could get the same amount of light)? Is there some limit to how short a shutter speed I can use? Could I do it with 1/2000th? What's the limiting factor? How bright my flash can output?
I know it seems like a basic gap in my understand, but hey, what can you do? :) |
OK, When you fire the flash in a non High Speed mode, when the shutter opens, it opens all the way to expose the entire sensor, and the flash fires one big pulse of light at your subject. When you put the flash in HSS mode and set the shutter to a speed over the regular sync speed, when the shutter opens, it does not open all the way, but the two curtains make a slit that moves across the sensor, exposing it. The flash, instead of firing one large pulse of light, fires many smaller pulses for the entire time, giving the effect of a much longer light pulse that will illuminate the subject for the entire time the slit is moving. |