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Howto open your Nikon SB-600 Speedlight

November 15th, 2008

So you are sitting in front of your SB-600 wondering how you can get it open?

I had the same issue. Upfront I need to tell you that you might loose your warrantie if you open the Speedlight by yourself so don’t blame me if you broke your Speedlight.

Before we start I need to tell you a little story to that. A while back Cosmo and I had been on a shooting with our friends from Fast Division. Later the day it got a little windey and Cosmo’s Flash fell over and the zoom was broken. Sad story cause the Flash was only a few days old. But the really weird part was, when I came home to show Cosmo my flash my zoom was also broken showing the same weird noise and no movement. Weird cause I didn’t use the flash all day and it was also broken. So we tried to find out how we can open the flash to check what was wrong. I have to admit my flash was in the corner since this day and I haven’t touched it. So today I found some time trying to find out how to open it and check what was wrong.

To open it it is actually not that hard once you found your screws. You just need a screwdriver, knife and some glew. There is 10 screws that need to be removed. The first 2 screws are just bellow the head (PICTURE1). But now the funny part. 4 screws are hidden below the push-button (PICTURE2) and the other 4 opposite from the push-button behind a rubber cover (PICTURE4). You have to remove the push-button and this rubber cover with a small knife slowly. Bellow the covers you will find the other 8 screws you were looking for (PICTURE4). When you removed them you can easily pop the speedlight open and check what’s wrong in there. When you finished you might want to remove the old glew from your rubber covers and put some new glew on them. That’s it!

I can not tell you how to fully fix your flash cause it can be thousand different things. In my case it was quite easy cause the little electric motor was popped out so it couldn’t move the flashbulb anymore. I need to check if this is the same problem on Cosmo’s flash but I heard that often little plastic parts breaking out which you might be able to glew back on yourself or not.

PICTURE1PICTURE2PICTURE3PICTURE4

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20 tips to Photograph lightning strike

June 23rd, 2008

PATIENCE! - I know it’s a boring job but you will love the results so be patient. Even if its badly raining or you are freezing just try to be patient.

LANDSCAPE! - try to have some parts of you photo with some landscape around 1/3 of your few. This makes the seen more dramatic when you catch a lightning coming down.

FOCUS! - stay focus on you camera and your attempt to catch a lightning strike. ignore that you get heavily wet, that cars are horning at you, people tell you to back off or your mobile is ringing. Ignore all that and stay focused on your idea

SLEEP! - don’t fall asleep. Happened to me too once :-) I know it’s hard after a long hard working day sit for hours in the rain and try to catch some lightning strikes on your camera.

ISO! - think before setup your camera. Even if it is dark outside you don’t have to have an iso of 800 or higher because the energy and light is so bright when the lightning hits it will get as bright as daylight

LENS! - my recommendation for beginners is a small wide-angel lens btw. 16-22mm (24-36mm KB Format) cause this gives you a bigger few of your scene and a higher chance to catch a strike

SHUTTER! - If you don’t have a tripod and a remote cable release you should use a shutter speed of around 1/60-1/250 of a second cause this way you are able to get some kind of trail of the lightning. remember even if it is totally dark outside. You try to catch some lightning strikes and they are going to light your scene big time

AF! - don’t use Autofocus because you will miserably fail. What you should do is simple. Turn on manual focus and put your lens to infinite cause your focus will be the lightning and not a subject or a tree or anything.

DISPLAY! - Don’t waste time reviewing your shots on your display cause you can do this later and you might just miss this big lighting striking right into your point of view. Digital photos are free so don’t waste time on scene. Although if you only have one battery you save battery time too.

MEMORY! - try to have as many memory cards or storage options with you cause you don’t want to miss a shot while you are deleting failed shots or your card is full.

TRIGGER! - while waiting for a strike hold your cam steady and press your release half-way trough that you are ready for the photo. when you see a lightning coming just press your release and fire up until you think the strike is over and you wait for the next. Happened really often to me that I only fired once or twice but there were another 2-3 lightning strikes following.

CONTINUOUS! - If your camera has continuous shooting use it on the highest setting your camera does cause your chance will be bigger to catch a strike.

WATCH! - Watch the lightning travelling. This is important. After you have done it a few times you will realise that the lightning is trailing the same way as the clouds do and there will be position for about 10-20 minutes were there is more activity then on other locations so watch and count and follow your feelings.

ENERGY! - take water and maybe some drinks with caffeine in it to keep you awake but more importantly take something that gives you energy like a small mars bar or some other chocolate or even some fruits if you like.

AWAKE! - If you are up more then 10-12 hours already don’t go out and try to shoot lightning strikes because you will be to tired and to slow to release the shutter.

CLOTHES! - Prepare yourself properly. You don’t want to go into a storm without a cagoule don’t yaw?

PROTECT! - protect your equipment. Something I do is I take 2 big black plastic bags with me and pack my stuff in while I take my photos. This way everything stays dry.

SAFETY! - if you realise that the strikes are coming closer and closer you better of going home because safety comes first! You are no good dead to anybody.

FRIENDS! - try to go out with one or two friends and position yourself in a circle this way your chance is higher to catch some lightning

TRIPOD! - if you don’t have one try to get a cheap tripod. This is an essential piece of equipment everybody should have. If you put your cam on a tripod and use a remote release you are able to move and walk and you still can fire up your camera. You will stay focus longer because you don’t have to look trough your viewfinder.

GOOD LUCK!!!!

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Photo, Tutorials

eJabberd experience

February 3rd, 2006

I wanna write down for everybody how my experience with ejabberd 1.0.0 went on on a Gentoo and FreeBSD 6.0 Server. I will also write this all down as a Tutorial “Howto Setup eJabberd on freebsd with AIM,Yahoo, MSN,ICQ,IRC and email transport.

At the moment the stage is like that, that I have ejabber perfectly running if you want to try it out create an account on jabber.marvinnet.org with the Jabber Web Client. I am working on the mod_irc at the moment as it seems there is some problems with some servers. I can connect to some IRC Server via irc.jabber.marvinnet.org Transport but to some not and I dont know why. Astro  is just writting a programm called RbIRC-t what is a Jabber IRC Transport written in Ruby. this might help me out. The MSN Transport is working fine at the moment too. I might integrate the ICQ Transport today as well. If I get this all up and running I will finish working on the howto for ejabberd. But at the moment I am really happy to be in the world of safe and simple chatting.

Mnet, Tutorials