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Einteins vs Elinchrom RX series
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<blockquote data-quote="WayneF" data-source="post: 199837" data-attributes="member: 12496"><p>You are right, I guess I was, sorry. But, it is still not like Einstein. I downloaded the PDF manual, and it makes no mention of constant color, or even "color" (the word is not in the manual). Its speed is about 2x faster at full power than at 1/32 power, so it is voltage controlled, like Alienbees, a conventional monolight, and not at all like Einstein or speedlights. Which is NOT necessarily a bad thing.</p><p></p><p> It is digital, with a knob and LED display to set power level (as opposed to an analog slider). I have no knowledge about this one, but which on some past units, can cause problems when operating on a battery converter, because the battery cannot supply initial recharge voltage high enough to keep the flash electronics from rebooting every flash.</p><p>If battery converter operation might be of interest, this would be a good question to ask first.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WayneF, post: 199837, member: 12496"] You are right, I guess I was, sorry. But, it is still not like Einstein. I downloaded the PDF manual, and it makes no mention of constant color, or even "color" (the word is not in the manual). Its speed is about 2x faster at full power than at 1/32 power, so it is voltage controlled, like Alienbees, a conventional monolight, and not at all like Einstein or speedlights. Which is NOT necessarily a bad thing. It is digital, with a knob and LED display to set power level (as opposed to an analog slider). I have no knowledge about this one, but which on some past units, can cause problems when operating on a battery converter, because the battery cannot supply initial recharge voltage high enough to keep the flash electronics from rebooting every flash. If battery converter operation might be of interest, this would be a good question to ask first. [/QUOTE]
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Einteins vs Elinchrom RX series
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