I haven't used the Pentax 360, so I can't say for sure that the Sigma is 
"better." But it does have a higher guide number, so it will allow you to use a 
smaller f stop if you need it. That extra power is important when bouncing the 
flash off a reflector or ceiling. By "almost flawless" I mean that exposures 
are very close without bracketing. I would say that they're generally within 
1.3 f-stop or so of ideal, which is plenty close when shooting  RAW. In fact, 
it's impossible to say if any discrepancy from a perfect exposure is due to 
camera error or operator error.
Paul


> Never having used a flash, forgive my ignorance.  What makes the Sigma a
> better choice than the Pentax?  Almost flawless?  Are there things about
> flash that are problematical?  Why is the istD "pretty much useless at TTL
> flash?"
> 
> Shel 
> 
> 
> > [Original Message]
> > From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
> > > In practice, the istD is pretty much useless at TTL flash.
> > > 
> > > William Robb 
> > > 
> >
> > My *istD works great at iso 400 with both the Sigma 500 Super and the
> Pentax AT400 flash. Probably a bit better with the Sigma, where it's almost
> flawless.
> >
> >
> 
> 

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