I didn't change anything on the strobe/snoot, it could of course be that I while looking through my viewfinder accidentally bumped the snoot and it changed the alignment to the flash tube, but that also would not explain why it was a regular occurrence.
It was consistently sunny, of course it could be that a cloud just passed by the sun when I took this shot- but that also doesn't explain the regular occurrence of it.
Before I started shooting I took a few images with the flash turned off to make sure that the background would indeed be totally black and at that point the sun was for sure shining.
I spent a total of 45min just with the boxer-crab on this dive and took a million pictures, quite a few of them in fast succession, and they are totally different in exposure, even when it was a matter of say, a frame/2 sec one would be good, one would not, then three would be good, one would not etc.
Anyways, as I was a bit bored while doing my safety stop earlier today I thought that maybe it could be the sun rays shimmering on the bottom, as the little critter was pretty shallow, 6-7m.
The ripples/small waves on the surface collect the light in the same way a magnifying glass does, and maybe that increased level of light would be enough to show in the images despite of the rather dark exposure, experiences anyone?
Next time I go on a cloudy day and see if I have the same problem!
-Morten