Ouch! That's unfortunate. I'm glad you still had warranty cover.Marsu42 said:I do know however that I fried my 600rt flash a couple of months ago, the flash head was replaced under warranty.
-pw
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Ouch! That's unfortunate. I'm glad you still had warranty cover.Marsu42 said:I do know however that I fried my 600rt flash a couple of months ago, the flash head was replaced under warranty.
Marsu42 said:pwp said:Interesting. Where did you read that? In a multi-decade career using flash almost daily, I've never heard this. On the contrary, underused flashes can have shorter lives, but then it's the capacitors that generally fail. Flashes that are stored unused for long periods should be "exercised" from time to time.Marsu42 said:One note: shooting at full power kills your flash, so if you often shoot m flash anyway w/o need for Canon's rt protocol maybe it's a good idea to buy a cheap Pixel flash... ruining the flash tube of a €500 flash seems like a waste of money if a €70 flash does the same thing.
I'm happy to stand corrected here! As with much knowledge I cannot pinpoint the exact source, which doesn't necessarily mean the information was wrong. Maybe others can add some insight.
I do know however that I fried my 600rt flash a couple of months ago. Coupled with my (probably mistaken) "knowledge", I pinpointed the reason to me using the flash at 100% full power for daylight fill flash all the time. The effect was that one day the power got weaker, fluctuated and then the flash was broken.
Interesting read. Thanks for that. It completely contradicts my own no-doubt narrow though long experience, but maybe I've just been just plain lucky.privatebydesign said:Flash tubes have a remarkably short full power rated lifespan. We all generally get hugely more out of them than the ratings but that doesn't change the actual manufacturers specs.
http://www.strobist.blogspot.com/2013/02/will-your-flash-last-forever.html
pwp said:Interesting read. Thanks for that. It completely contradicts my own no-doubt narrow though long experience, but maybe I've just been just plain lucky.privatebydesign said:Flash tubes have a remarkably short full power rated lifespan. We all generally get hugely more out of them than the ratings but that doesn't change the actual manufacturers specs.
http://www.strobist.blogspot.com/2013/02/will-your-flash-last-forever.html
To quote the Strobist article....And it might surprise you to know that 5,000 pops is an expected life span for some flash tubes. Disappointed? I was, too. And it gets worse: some tubes are rated at 1,000 pops.
No manufacturer could survive on these figures, every sale would result in a warranty replacement. On a big day I'd easily expect 1000+ pops from 580 exII & 600 ex-rt, and sometimes 3000+ from the Einsteins in a big studio session. Comments in the Strobist post are also completely at odds with the claims.
I'd love to see some real manufacturers numbers on this, unsubstantiated Strobist editorial content doesn't necessarily establish stable facts. Like contemporary Japanese cars, I'm constantly amazed at the durability and reliability of products sold by Canon, Panasonic, Apple, Paul C Buff (US) and so on.
But flash tubes? The future looks very bright.
-pw
pwp said:I'd love to see some real manufacturers numbers on this, unsubstantiated Strobist editorial content doesn't necessarily establish stable facts.