Originally posted by Bob from Aus
Interesting solutions,. I also only use M settings on the camera. I also set my flashes to M and either adjust the aperture or flash. I usually have the flash on half so I have a faster recycle time. I gave up stuffing around with PTTL back with the K10. I found the film version of TTL extremely reliable in both pentax and olympus. I did always set the aperture with these film cameras. (reading light from the film worked really well, but the reflection from the glass protecting the sensor messes things up and I believe pentax came up with a convoluted system hence the P in front of the TTL))
One thing I read long ago (and likely have bookmarked somewhere) - the main difference between film and digital is that film tends to saturate so that you don't get blown highlights, but runs into trouble in low light. Digital tends to be the reverse is that it is easy to blow out the sensor, but a camera like the K5 has fantastic low light capabilities and dynamic range. This doesn't mean that flash can't work with digital - as you note I think most of the problem is a Pentax one rather than a general digital one. I haven't played with the photos I've taken with my flash, but I'm guessing that the ones that still look dark can in fact be rescued, but the blown out ones can't. So shooting at lower power has a lot of advantages, beyond just faster recycling.