Dave Largent
November 24th, 2003, 03:05 PM
Hi y'all
Many of you have helped me with advice, and when I try out
some piece of equipment that might have been purchased with
your guidance, I like to get back with a commentary (positive or negative) in hopes that I can maybe help someone else out by relaying my hands-on experience.
I got the Pag because my needs required better than the Sony 10/20W light. Problems with the Sony are: too narrow a beam for a wide angle, too harsh (leads to shiny, unflattering complexions), not controllable-enough brightness. C6 build quality seems okay, I suppose. The bulb doesn't sit exactly centered in the reflective dome but i guess that's not a big deal. The light *is* thrown off center a bit because of this but this, I suppose, is nitpicking. The combo barndoors/diffuser/dichroic adjuster seems of okay quality, I guess. The battery, which slings over the shoulder like a purse, was lighter in weight than expected and could probably be worn for quite some time comfortably. Weighs about 3 pounds. The light housing itself is quite lite in weight. Fastens to shoe. Tilts up and down. Charging and connections are all straight forward. Takes 4 hours to recharge. The included 20W light is surprisingly bright. At an evening event it would blind any that looked into it. The included diffuser cuts down on light transmission a bit--but the light is still objectionably glarring to anyone looking into it in a dark room. I've placed an order for a lamp shade-type accessory diffuser. This diffuser is the main reason I bought the light. B&H has it but it's not on their site yet; you have to call it in. Part # PASLDFS. Unique diffuser. The focusing of the Pag is not exactly "focusing". At "wide" or "spot" it illuminates the same area. (It will fill the area seen by a wide angle lens.) It more just evens the light out so that there are no hot spots. Aim it at a wall to adjust. It comes with 2 barndoors, a dichroic, and a diffuser all on it. The dichroic and the diffuser, when they're off to the side at about 90 degrees to the light, do catch the light and create an objectionable "flying saucer" projetion onto your subject. Either open them up quite wide or remove. Pretty loose fit; they flop around. Fell off a couple times. I'm replacing them with 2 more barn doors so I'll have 4.
You kinda do start to feel like you're being nickel and dimed with the C6. Light: $350. Proper diffuser: $60. Barndoors to get rid of flying saucer: $40. Couple extra bulbs (50W & 100W): $20. Dimmer switch:
$140.
I hope it's all worth it in the end.
Many of you have helped me with advice, and when I try out
some piece of equipment that might have been purchased with
your guidance, I like to get back with a commentary (positive or negative) in hopes that I can maybe help someone else out by relaying my hands-on experience.
I got the Pag because my needs required better than the Sony 10/20W light. Problems with the Sony are: too narrow a beam for a wide angle, too harsh (leads to shiny, unflattering complexions), not controllable-enough brightness. C6 build quality seems okay, I suppose. The bulb doesn't sit exactly centered in the reflective dome but i guess that's not a big deal. The light *is* thrown off center a bit because of this but this, I suppose, is nitpicking. The combo barndoors/diffuser/dichroic adjuster seems of okay quality, I guess. The battery, which slings over the shoulder like a purse, was lighter in weight than expected and could probably be worn for quite some time comfortably. Weighs about 3 pounds. The light housing itself is quite lite in weight. Fastens to shoe. Tilts up and down. Charging and connections are all straight forward. Takes 4 hours to recharge. The included 20W light is surprisingly bright. At an evening event it would blind any that looked into it. The included diffuser cuts down on light transmission a bit--but the light is still objectionably glarring to anyone looking into it in a dark room. I've placed an order for a lamp shade-type accessory diffuser. This diffuser is the main reason I bought the light. B&H has it but it's not on their site yet; you have to call it in. Part # PASLDFS. Unique diffuser. The focusing of the Pag is not exactly "focusing". At "wide" or "spot" it illuminates the same area. (It will fill the area seen by a wide angle lens.) It more just evens the light out so that there are no hot spots. Aim it at a wall to adjust. It comes with 2 barndoors, a dichroic, and a diffuser all on it. The dichroic and the diffuser, when they're off to the side at about 90 degrees to the light, do catch the light and create an objectionable "flying saucer" projetion onto your subject. Either open them up quite wide or remove. Pretty loose fit; they flop around. Fell off a couple times. I'm replacing them with 2 more barn doors so I'll have 4.
You kinda do start to feel like you're being nickel and dimed with the C6. Light: $350. Proper diffuser: $60. Barndoors to get rid of flying saucer: $40. Couple extra bulbs (50W & 100W): $20. Dimmer switch:
$140.
I hope it's all worth it in the end.