Originally Posted by
apersson850
In theory, it sounds doable. But in reality, with today's digital cameras, isn't it easier to make a few exposures and check them out instead?
Regarding the doability of your project:
HSS works by emitting several flashes during the exposure. It's easy to envision, if you think about an exposure time which renders the shutter slit half of the sensor size. That is, if flash sync is at 1/250 s, we use 1/500 s.
In a perfect world, the flash could then flash twice. Once to lit the upper half of the image, and once again to lit the lower. Each of these two flashes would be identical to the single flash required at 1/250 s. It's just that at 1/500 s, half of the light in each flash is wasted on that part of the image which isn't exposed at that moment.
So a flash meter, which is clever enough to measure only the first of the two flashes, would get the output right. But one that integrates the two together, would find the light twice as powerful.
However, in reality the flash can't fire just two flashes, since then the slightest bad luck with tolerances would render a black stripe across the center of the frame. Or a twice as bright band, if tolerances are on the other side.
So the flash has to fire a multitude of times, each a fraction of what's needed for the proper exposure of that part of the image. A separate flash meter can't measure that output unless it also knows for how long a certain part of the subject is exposed to the sensor. That is, how long the shutter slit passes the part of the image the meter is measuring.
Hence the flash has to fire at twice the rate if the exposure time is cut to half, or, if the rate of flashing is the same, with twice as high power each time. But to the image sensor, it all looks the same.