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Rating: Summary: choice of flashgun Review: Having played around with photography for 20 years now I am baffled by Vivitar.They produce the 283 flashgun (a good product). Then they produce the 285 with almost the same specs.Except the 283 trigger voltage is over 300 volts and the 285 is 8 volts. Ok if used on the old SLR`s.But what about digital cameras? There are users asking what flashgun can I use on my Fuji 4900 and 6900? I go faint at the thought of putting a 283 on my Fuji 4900. No information is given in the instruction book. So i must conclude with the old saying "Buyer beware"
Rating: Summary: Best autoflash at this price Review: I have read so many reviews about this flash. I quickly bought two and I fell in love with them. The night photography took a new shape after I replaced built-in TTL (I have a Pentax zx-50) with these ladies. No more unnatural axial light, no more under-exposure. The four auto modes (f/2.8, 4, 8 and 11 for 100ASA film) are easy to set and give enough flexibility to choose DOF. The manual mode is also there for those who want it more technically correct. The weakest point are: 1. its weight compared to most modern compact SLRs; 2. weak foot. Lots of accessories are available in reasonabe price. A real workhorse!
Rating: Summary: Vivitar 283 & 285 Work HorseFlashes Review: I've been using Vivitar 283 and 285's for years now. I was introduced to the 285 when my backlight died on a Glamour shoot. The style my client wanted was an over exposed background to ad a haze around the subject through the softener1 filter. This required a powerful flash. The only store near the salon was a Carmen's camera and all they had in their used department was this old 285, the man in the store, a professional photographer himself, assured me that with a slave unit on the manual setting this flash would be powerful enough to do the job. He even had an SB-4 power supply and this little plastic display unit, which made a perfect little backlight stand!Not only did this flash recycle in time, it was powerful enough to do the job. This little flash even replaced my Metz for wedding work because of its compact size! I also noticed at the time that many other press photographers were leaving their Metz's at home too! For travelling and backpacking I bring my 283, which is very light and also has the remote sensor feature so handy for close-up work. The 283 also sits nicer on the hot shoe being lighter, making the camera less top-heavy. Which brings me to the only complaint I have with these two flashes.... or many hot shoe flashes for that matter. Shooting at crowded concerts or busy news scrums the vulnerability of the hot shoe is always on my mind, on more than one occasion I have broken this hot shoe and had to order a new one which requires a bit of assembly and downtime. To make up for this -the remote sensor makes it possible to use these flashes off camera even with the broken hot shoe and with the amount of used 283's and 285's out there at good prices, they are still the best darn portable mini flashes I've come across! With an on camera 283 fill light, reflected, a slaved 285 with a reflector on a stand next to the camera and a 283 slaved for a back light and you have yourself a portable studio, but watch out your subject doesn't step on the backlight!
Rating: Summary: The Professional Standard Review: The venerable Vivitar 283 doesn't have a lot of the bells and whistles of some other flashes. There's no coupling to the camera's computer and no through-the-camera-lens exposure control. But what you do get is a rugged, powerful unit with automatic and manual modes and a very complete family of accessories. You can get diffusers, auto-triggers, manual power adjusters, remote cables for the auto sensor, AC power supplies... just about anything imaginable. And there are aftermarket accessories, too; I've equipped my 283s with metal replacement feet and a detachable mini-softbox. I own *four* 283s, and I use them for everything from small-product tabletop shooting to portraits to outdoor nature photography. There's nothing more reliable and versitile on the market.
Rating: Summary: The Professional Standard Review: The venerable Vivitar 283 doesn't have a lot of the bells and whistles of some other flashes. There's no coupling to the camera's computer and no through-the-camera-lens exposure control. But what you do get is a rugged, powerful unit with automatic and manual modes and a very complete family of accessories. You can get diffusers, auto-triggers, manual power adjusters, remote cables for the auto sensor, AC power supplies... just about anything imaginable. And there are aftermarket accessories, too; I've equipped my 283s with metal replacement feet and a detachable mini-softbox. I own *four* 283s, and I use them for everything from small-product tabletop shooting to portraits to outdoor nature photography. There's nothing more reliable and versitile on the market.
Rating: Summary: Will work with Digital Cameras... Review: Vivitar 283s made from the late 1990's onward will work fine with Digital Cameras. Only older units from the 1980's and early 1990's have a trigger voltage that sometimes exceeds 300v. Newer units will may function just fine depending on what voltage your camera can handle (again, research). You can test the trigger voltage of the unit by using a multimeter on the shoe pins and triggering the flash with the test button. Much more information can be found via a web search.
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