AussieByron
Contributor
Think about two beams of light with a given angle
If you spread the arm wide and point the strobe forward the two beam meet in the center and illuminate forward with the same angle of one of the strobe
If your strobes are closer and you point them outward so that they meet in the same point as above the cone of light you are producing is much narrower and reduces by the amount you are turning them away. Part of the frame on the sides is likely to be lit by one strobe only whilst you want both rays of light to meet to eliminate shadows
So having strobes pointed forward and changing the arm length is physically the best way to have the largest area illuminated with the least backscatter in front of the lens
Not sure this is clear to you but if you get a piece of paper and Pencil and draw it is quite visual
I have to disagree with you here Interceptor. Having strobes out wide on extra long arms isnt the best way of illuminating large areas. What you will end up is alot of shadow when your subject comes close to you and alot of missed shot from trying to reposition strobe arm lengths especially if your using Ultra wide Fisheye lenses.
The cone of light from a strobe is still going to say 100-110degree in coverage. So having strobes close to the housing and behind it with those strobes angled slightly away from the dome/lens allows you greater coverage, no problems with shadow from a subject if it gets close (unless its touching the dome itself) and backscatter is reduced as the strobes are angled away from the lens. You dont have to worry about moving arms in and out if the subject gets closer or moves away.
The whole idea of wide angle photography is to get get really close to subject and have alot of coverage from strobes. Thats why we use fisheye lens with 180 degree coverage so we can fit that large subject like a Shark or Manta into the whole frame whilst being close enough to light up the whole subject with your strobes successfully.
Regards Mark