MeidokonWiki:

Buff Einstein 640

Product homepage: http://paulcbuff.com/e640.php

Rob Galbraith has a more serious review for sports usage. This page is mostly just me rambling.

See the parent page for notes on buying these things.

I use it with the Cyber Commander remote and Vagabond battery pack, it's a great setup.

attachment:DSC_7963.jpg attachment:DSC_7964.jpg

Why?

Specs

General thoughts

It's a pleasure to use, and just works. Braindead-easy to use.

Obviously less conducive to rapid changes on position/composition than a hotshoe.

Takes the umbrellas you know and love. Built-in attachment mounting ring means heaps of options for light modifiers.

Plenty of power, this was shot with 1/250sec, f/16, ISO 100, and the light probably at 320-450 Ws:
attachment:DSC_7771.jpg
Rest of the day's photos here.

Easy to move and adjust on location. Battery unit is convenient for weighing down the base of the lightstand a little, but not enough on its own unless there's no wind.

Portability

I have a Lowepro Fastpack 200, which is medium-sized - not huge, but big enough to carry a useful amount of gear. »What a normal loadout looks like

  • D700 w/ 80-200 in the bottom main compartment
  • SB-600 in the bottom compartment, in a divided section
  • 50mm/1.4 stashed in another small divided section
  • 16-35mm/4 in the top section
  • Some free space in the top section for a jumper/shirt, laptop, and another lens/speedlight or two

You can fit an E640 in the top section with plenty of room on the sides:
attachment:DSC_7979.jpg

It's about the same size as an 80-200mm f/2.8:
attachment:DSC_7974.jpg

Annoyances

Why an Einstein vs. an Alienbee?

Compared to the B1600, which is also rated at 640 Ws.

»Expand

  • Universal voltage
  • Cheaper wireless receiver modules
  • Wireless controller is more expensive, but far more capable
  • Heavily integrated 2nd-gen remote control, the Alienbee 1st-gen cybersync stuff is kinda janky (perfectly functional, just not as nice)

  • Better output-level control, another 3 stops of latitude
  • Only ~350g heavier
  • Brighter modelling lamp (250W vs. 150W)
  • Modelling lamp can track flash output with offset

  • Slightly faster cycle time
  • Flash duration proportional to power, like hotshoe strobes

Comparison to a speedlight system

Attribute

Einstein 640

Speedlight SB-800

Notes

Weight

2kg

500g

They're probably fairly close in terms of output-per-gram

Portability

Much larger

Compact even with attached foot

-

Light output

Absurdly high

Rather high

Numerical comparison would require some apples-to-apples testing

Burst capability

Good

A few flashes, depending on power

Not specced. Try opto-slaving the E640 to a speedlight's modelling light for a laugh

Cycle time

1.7sec to full output

2.7sec to full output

2.3sec quoted for newer speedlights

Output control

1/10th f-stop

1/3rd f-stop

-

Continuous shooting

Basically non-stop

Subject to overheating

Speedlight behaviour varies between models. Buff gear only defines a maximum continuous usage for the Zeus lineup

Modelling lamp

250W bulb

None

Usefulness heavily dependent on your style, E640 cannot use lamp with battery

What about cost? Assumptions:

For the lights:

Triggering:

Power:

MeidokonWiki: furinkan/photography/lighting/Buff_Einstein_640 (last edited 2012-01-15 03:18:42 by furinkan)