With the use of the reflector, I was able to maintain my exposure exactly where I measured it in my camera, and all I had to do was just simply tweak the white balance, and a little pop by increasing the blacks, adding some contrast, and decreasing the shadow. And after ACR, it made my edits quick and no need to add extra tweaking or tricks to get that nice full glow, because I already did that in camera!

I have a reflector on a source 4 elipsoidal with a big ole crack in it and need to change it out. I however have not found any documentation to help with the process. I would greatly appreciate any help here.


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You will need to drill out the rivets on each of the 4 reflector brackets to remove the brackets. You may only need to remove 2 brackets to get the old reflector out. Then re-install the brackets you removed with new rivets. Then the new reflector will slide into and snap into place in the brackets. make sure you keep the little silver ring that is on the old reflector and put it on the new reflector.

On a hard surface, preferably with a carpet betwen the fixture and the surface, firmly bang the reflector assembly down on the surface so the reflector may pop out of the spring clips. Again, keep that silver ring so you can re-use it. You may need to do this a couple of times to get it out. If the reflector is cracked all the way through, it may fall into pieces.

If that doesn't work, you can also take a hammer to the reflector, as the big ole crack makes it likely unusable anyway, so breaking it further won't make any difference. Again I stress, wear all proper protective gear (long sleeve shirt, safety glasses or faceshield, gloves) so you don't get injured by any flying glass shards.

Popping the new reflector should just be a matter of pressing firmly down equally on all four quadrants of the reflector until all the spring clips catch the edge of the reflector. It is possible to get it in crooked, so take some care when reinstalling the new reflector, because you may have to try the same techniques or drill the rivets out if it gets stuck.

Use a screwdriver to pop out the steel spring at the rear opening for the lamp. After that is out, you should be able to flip the rear housing over and again carefully with a screwdriver (or a hard plastic prying device like Apple uses to pop Mac Mini Cases) and gloves pry the retaining clips on one side away from the reflector. It will then tilt to one side and slide out. To insert, just put the reflector in at an angle, center the spring around the lamp hole with a gloved finger and turn it as you insert until the forward retaining rings "click." The hardest part of this operation is getting the spring centered around the back. But you get better with time.

I know this is kinda reviving a dead thread, but I had to move a reflector from a busted body to a new one this week and came up with this nifty trick: I cut a pop can into strips about an inch wide, folded each strip in half, and placed a strip between each spring clip and the reflector. They reduced the resistance provided by the clips just enough that I could, with a bit of careful effort, push the reflector out without any banging or breaking.

I stumbled onto this chat while doing research on how to successfully swap some reflectors without breaking them. Drlynn's soda can trick is the best solution! Thank you for posting, I changed 2 reflectors on my first time without any problems!

This portable reflector kit combines 2 reflectors in one bag. Bounce and diffuse sunlight in tandem, or use them separately. The diffusive panel softens shadows, while the two-sided reflective panel can be used to bounce in reflected, controlled light. Illuminator reflectors are made with the highest-quality double-laminated fabric and steel-riveted frames that are backed by a lifetime limited warranty.

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@Alad

Is this a reply to my post or someone else's? Confused here as, as far as I'm concerned, I am not even using the --country flag or option. The latest changes have sort of "killed or broken" reflector for me.....

I can still do this

stef_204, you were asking reflector to get actual (empirically determined) speed metrics for 200 servers. That will take a long time as is really a huge bandwidth waste. You should prefilter a bit before sorting by rate. But until some relatively recent changes, it may have been quite a bit faster to do the same command because assessing mirror rate was done in parallel based on how many cpu cores you have. But you still retrieved data from 200 servers every time you ran reflector, and arguably that was not only excess, but a total waste as I've argued that parallel rate determination is unreliable - particularly when the number of threads is based just on $(nproc) - in many cases to the point of meaninglessness.

AFAIK, the mirror list backend already rates the mirrors. This is where the respective rating data in the JSON objects comes from.

So there's no need for each and every client to rate the mirrors again.

I think that this was a feature in reflector to allow users to fine tune the mirror list for their respective location and internet connection.

But whether such functionality is really worth the effort is indeed doubtful.

When I implemented speculum as an alternative to reflector, I refrained from implementing such a thing in the first place.

Btw, powerpill uses reflector internally to build a list of mirrors for parallel downloads, which is why the speed of the mirrors in the system mirrorlist is basically irrelevant when using powerpill. The versions and checksums are checked against the downloaded databases, and the packages are all signed, so the only thing that really matters is the accuracy of the databases.

I can't troubleshoot the root cause, but for some reason, when running under systemd (as of the current package), proper config of /etc/resolv.conf is needed for reflector. When running it stand-alone, /etc/resolv.conf is not needed.

The difference is that the latter would generate a traditional config of reflector with all Canadian mirrors, immediately followed by the Worldwide mirrors (consistently with pacman-mirrorlist). Note that, in the context above, "*" is not the same as "Worldwide". The latter is not meant to match any country, it is meant to be country agnostic.

I am installing arch and I want to know whether reflector is important or not ? Reflector only uses local servers / mirror servers which are usually faster but I installed arch in virtualbox without reflector and I never got any problems with pacman and whatsoever and the speed was very fast. When I tried to use reflector in virtualbox I got error. I did `reflector -c India --sort rate > /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist`. I couldn't find the command in wiki so I got this command from youtube. I just want to know whether it is important to setup reflector or not.

Built with high-quality materials and fabrics, it allows for heavy-duty use during long studio hours. The Soft Zoom Reflector comes with a custom-made carrying case that fits the reflector and zoom rod, ensuring that it's always protected and ready to use.

Reflector ships with a reflector.service. The service will run reflector with the parameters specified in /etc/xdg/reflector/reflector.conf. The default options in this file should serve as a good starting point and example.

pacman-mirrorlist is not updated regularly, invoking reflector only because some mirror in some part of the globe was added or removed is not relevant. Use instead the timer-based automation. If you do not want mirrorlist.pacnew to be installed at all, use NoExtract in pacman.conf.

I have a Photoflex arm to hold the large reflector. However, it is entirely cantilevered requiring a larger stand or weights on the stand. Are there mounts that hold the reflector in front of the stand?

Get a reflector clamp that mounts on a light stand, use an umbrella mount if you need to adjust it. Some of these won't open enough for the 5-in-1 models but there's usually a gap in the cover where you can clamp.

Or get a reflector boom arm that has a mount between the reflector clamps; this balances better than the cantilever style but won't reflect down. If you need down, use the extender arm perpendicular to the light stand and attach the reflector boom arm to it.

1) The clamps on the shaft offer minimal resistance to rotating and changing the angle of the reflector. The clamps just aren't strong enough to handle the moment arm of the reflector. Note that the reflector isn't positioned hanging down below the boom arm, it is parallel to the boom arm to the side 2351a5e196

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