Author |
Force flashlight for k810i |
nosscire76 Joined: Feb 26, 2008 Posts: 11 PM |
Hi,
There are so many camera firmwarre in this forum. Does anyone knows which one have feature to force the flashlight to turn on even under bright area?
In the flashlight menu, there are only OFF, AUTO and RED-EYE REduction.
Thus, if my object behind have a bright light, I'm not able to compensate the brightness of my object with a flash and my object turns out to be very dark in the picture compare to the bright surrounding.
Thanks guy! |
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aremaboy Joined: Nov 27, 2004 Posts: > 500 From: Malang, Indonesia PM |
No, you can't. Unfortunately. |
Raiderski Joined: Jul 03, 2006 Posts: > 500 From: Poland, Hell, Mountains PM, WWW
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Thus, if my object behind have a bright light, I'm not able to compensate the brightness of my object with a flash and my object turns out to be very dark in the picture compare to the bright surrounding
menu -> Metering Mode -> spot
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killerPK Joined: Oct 11, 2007 Posts: 252 From: Lahore, Pakistan PM |
On 2008-02-26 14:21:27, Raiderski wrote:
menu -> Metering Mode -> spot
Otherwise, there are many camera drivers with Force Flash written with them for this purpose. |
Raiderski Joined: Jul 03, 2006 Posts: > 500 From: Poland, Hell, Mountains PM, WWW
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nosscire76 described typical light metering problem. there is ideal and dedicated solution for this problem - spot metering. of course you can play with force flash, but for me it's like a force in already opened doors you should also remember that forced flash will force high ISO (320-400 depends on driver) where spot metering will use low ISO
1) normal, 2) forced flash, 3) spot metering
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jomateixa Joined: Dec 09, 2007 Posts: > 500 From: PM |
On 2008-02-27 12:18:33, Raiderski wrote:
nosscire76 described typical light metering problem. there is ideal and dedicated solution for this problem - spot metering. of course you can play with force flash, but for me it's like a force in already opened doors  you should also remember that forced flash will force high ISO (320-400 depends on driver) where spot metering will use low ISO
1) normal, 2) forced flash, 3) spot metering
Yea but you could use Doc mode (ISO 100) with forced flash and result will be better that that. Anyway spot metering is the correct mode for that situation
[ This Message was edited by: jomateixa on 2008-02-27 18:39 ] |
Faraji Joined: Jan 08, 2011 Posts: 1 PM |
You had a good option into this typical flashlight you used. The feature of force flashlight was made into a great bright. It can able to used in a best surrounding.
My TV shows flashlight
[ This Message was edited by: Faraji on 2011-01-08 05:37 ] |
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