sdegan wrote:
So, for instance, if the HSS is 1/125 I will set close down the aperture e.g. f11 and will test for the amount of light that reaches the sensor. Assuming that I need a faster shutter speed to freeze the action I will try to close the aperture. If the test shot (I have not tried this yet) does not record any ambient light I will set the Einstein to Action for shorter flash durations. Am I right?
Many thanks for your help.
This mostly make sense, and seems you get the idea. However, I am not familiar with a digital camera that has a 1/125 x-sync speed. I could certainly be wrong, but most common settings are 1/160, 1/180, 1/200, or 1/250 (official specs. Some can sync faster, some slower than official specs).
Also, f/11 seems like a high value aperture for indoor work. This would require the lights to be set higher, and lengthen the flash duration and recycle time. Setting your camera to f/5.6 or f/4 will likely still render a black image. You may also still be able to increase your ISO to 200 or 400, which will lower the flash power as well, and still get a dark frame.
This will vary from venue to venue, high school venues will be better, since the ambient light is lower. Some colleges and pro venues will be lit for television and have higher light levels. Outdoors in daylight will be a different scenario.