For a newbie, 580ex or 430ex?
TaDa
Registered Users Posts: 169 Major grins
I have been in this hobby now for about 3 months and love every moment of it. With tons of advice from you folks, when I was getting my kit together, I purchased a 580ex flash to go with my kit. I have an offer to trade my 580ex for a NIB 430ex plus $80. From everything that I've read, the two big differences between the flashes are the distance of light that the 580 covers is greater and the 580 can be a master where the 430 can only be a slave.
Honestly, I do not see myself setting up slave units anytime in the near future. I guess what I'm asking is should I trade away my 580 or would I immediately regret my decision? All of the functions that I've been reading up on like E-TTL II, are the same between the two flashes I believe.
Honestly, I do not see myself setting up slave units anytime in the near future. I guess what I'm asking is should I trade away my 580 or would I immediately regret my decision? All of the functions that I've been reading up on like E-TTL II, are the same between the two flashes I believe.
My Kit
Canon 5DII, Canon 7D
Canon Canon 24-70 f/2.8L, Canon 35 f/1.4L, Canon 70-200 f/2.8L IS II, Canon 85 f/1.2L II, Canon 500mm f/4 IS, Zeiss 21mm ZE
Speedlite 580ex II, Canon 430ex
Canon 5DII, Canon 7D
Canon Canon 24-70 f/2.8L, Canon 35 f/1.4L, Canon 70-200 f/2.8L IS II, Canon 85 f/1.2L II, Canon 500mm f/4 IS, Zeiss 21mm ZE
Speedlite 580ex II, Canon 430ex
0
Comments
This is what I did, and I'm very happy with the results, I got my first flash faster (less time saving) and learnt what I like and don't like (again havnig spent less), and when I'm ready I'll be growing into the bigger one, and I'll still have the 430 as a slave or for a second body
Because the new upgraded 580EX II is out, you could entertain this option: Go for the trade. Then, a couple years down the road if you get serious about multiple flashes, you buy the 580EX II. You use that as your master and your 430ex as the slave.
www.ivarborst.nl & smugmug
Also my 430's eat my batteries in about 2 days when left off, but the 580EX last over a week on the same rechargable batteries. This is why my 580EX is always with me and my 430's tend to stay home.
I am going to sell one 430, but keep the other for location stuff. It will fit in my Slingshot 300 better than an Alien Bee.
dak.smugmug.com
www.ivarborst.nl & smugmug
that one day I would upgrade from a 430EX if I bought it so I saved a bit
and got the big gun in the first place. The speed and power is amazing
and I've already run into situations where a 430EX would've been to weak.
This photo is pretty horrible but you get an idea of the power of the 580EX II:
The gym holds 3 basketballcourts. Flash was pointed upwards with
catchlight card pulled out (hence the overexposed foreground).
Zoomhead was at 24mm. Camera at f4 with 10mm wide angle lens and ISO 1600.
― Edward Weston
Thanks a ton all. Everything I heard is that the 430 is a great starter flash, but since I have the 580 as my starter flash, even better. That concert picture pretty much says it all. That flash looks like it lit up the whole hall.
Canon 5DII, Canon 7D
Canon Canon 24-70 f/2.8L, Canon 35 f/1.4L, Canon 70-200 f/2.8L IS II, Canon 85 f/1.2L II, Canon 500mm f/4 IS, Zeiss 21mm ZE
Speedlite 580ex II, Canon 430ex
430EX master does full stops of power:
1/1, 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, 1/32, 1/64, 1/128
580 EX and 430 as it's slave can do:
1/1, 1/1 - 0.3, 1/1 - 0.7, 1/2, 1/2 -0.3, 1/2 -0.7, 1/4, 1/4 -0.3, 1/4 -0.7, 1/8, 1/8 -0.3, 1/8 -0.7, 1/16
etc to 1/128
sometimes I just need a minor adjustment.
edit: yeah if I drop from 1/32 to 1/64 I go from f/11 to f/8 as an example.
dak.smugmug.com