Small Fill-In Flash Recommendations

giganova

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I am looking for a small flash that I can use as a fill-in flash.

I have a Metz from the SCA300 series, but I can't manually dial-in the flash intensity since it is always at 100% power. In Auto mode, it is too strong as a fill-in flash, too.

Any suggestions which small flash would be suitable as a fill-in flash?

Thanks!
 
I like the Nikon SB-30; it's tiny, and has three manual power settings and four auto aperture settings, as well as Auto/TTL (thats only usable with some- but not all- Nikon cameras). Really great for situations when I need just a little fill, and/or want to use just a little sparkle of flash shooting wide open. Here's a link to a useful review: http://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/sb30.htm
 
I use a small Metz (don't have access to the model number where I am now - I think it's the 20 C-2) that in addition to "M" has setting for F/2.8 and F5.6, which I use at F/4 and F/8, respectively, for fill flash.
 
I have the same Metz 20 C-2. It's a great size for rangefinder cameras. It has tilt and a business card can slide behind the tilting head as a bounce card.

I see B&H has what looks like the same flash called the Bolt VS-210 for $20 cheaper than the Metz, with auto modes at f4 and f2 instead of f5.6 and f2.8.

That's hardly surprising. The first version of this flash I own is from Sunpak which had an auto mode at f4 and slave mode. That one though hasn't been available for some time.

I like them because they take standard AA batteries and fit into a small Domke-F-5xa with 3 lenses and a camera.
 
Toshiba ES 20. Two AA bat. Has A and M modes.

Vivitar 45. One AA bat. Really small size and not strong light. Only M mode.

Neither can tilt, neither has manual intensity adjustment.
 
Years ago, many camera stores sold small flashes as counter specials for just a few dollars each, and I'd often grab one or two to use when I did small table top set-ups.
Virtually all of these were no-name, bare bones, non-dedicated, with no adjustable power settings, so I'd quench them to the power level I wanted by taping successive layers of Kleenex over the flash window, and measuring the resulting light bursts with my flashmeter until I got the intensity I wanted.
Worked like a champ.
You might still be able to buy little inexpensive flashes like these in camera stores. Worth a look.
Robert
 
Many of the older Nikon flashes could be used on auto mode. Once you set the f stop, you could then dial in a reduction number, sometimes as low as two stops less than you would normally use for that ISO and f stop. Failing that, get a small auto flash and simply use it at one or two stops wider open than the f stop on the lens.
 
Years ago, many camera stores sold small flashes as counter specials for just a few dollars each, and I'd often grab one or two to use when I did small table top set-ups.
Virtually all of these were no-name, bare bones, non-dedicated, with no adjustable power settings, so I'd quench them to the power level I wanted by taping successive layers of Kleenex over the flash window, and measuring the resulting light bursts with my flashmeter until I got the intensity I wanted.
Worked like a champ.
You might still be able to buy little inexpensive flashes like these in camera stores. Worth a look.
Robert

I do the same thing with a Nikon SB-15...either I use a regular table napkin or I also have the LumiQuest UltraBounce...
http://lumiquest.com/
 
I second some sort of old Nikon recommendation. My favorite is the SB-20, which has a tilting head. I run it on an old Leica CTOOM, the metal version, which in combination with the tilt head gives me a lot of bounce options. Used direct it has W/N/Tele settings, and the ability to select a stop for auto or dial down manual in steps. It's a bit larger than the SB-30, but extremely versatile.

The CTOOM is really a great flash bracket and has provision for using a center screw as well as going on Leicas, and makes a pretty good left-side handle. My Nikon FG fits perfectly, for instance. Since it doesn't have a hot shoe, I use a corded hot shoe adapter in it, with the flash on that. It's my go-to rig for parties (with M4 and 21mm lens, bounced).
 
Good recommendations, thanks!

I've done what many suggest, i.e., put the flash into Auto, and instead of the f/5.6 the flash suggests, I set my aperture to f/8. Works well, except that I have a huge depth-of-field when stopped down so far.

Has anyone tried putting a ND (neutral density) gel in front of the flash to dim it down 2 or even 3 f-stops and use manual instead?
 
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