Sam said:
4. Outdoors I keep flash head straight at subject.
5. Indoors I rotate the head up 1 click
Any particular reason why he recommends to keep falsh head straight at subject outdoors?
Below is taken from the URL:
Can I send you smething to help.
Print it oit and study, any questions just yell/
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D70 and SB-800 Shooting Settings
Common notes:
1. I Shoot in JPEG
2. I use the D70 body and SB-800, settings may be different with the built in flash
3. I Keep the diffusion dome on all the time.
4. Outdoors I keep flash head straight at subject.
5. Indoors I rotate the head up 1 click
Try these settings. I find them very accurate, easy to use, and give repeatable excellent quality exposures and white balance.
Scenario A. Outdoors with fill flash:
1. Matrix metering on camera
2. Aperture mode. Try to set about a 6.3.
Make sure shutter speed is 1/400 or slower.
If it goes above 1/400 close aperture a bit.
3. ISO beginning at 200 or 250. 320 if darker day
4. SB-800 on TTL BL. Exposure comp at 0 to begin with
(see note below) 
5. White balance : Flash , 0 comp (No, I’m not crazy)
Scenario B. Indoors with flash
1. Change metering to spot on D70.
2. (This also changes the SB-800 to regular TTL automatically)
2. Manual metering on camera. I use 1/80 second at f6.3
or f 8.
3. (Don’t use too large an aperture.
4. SB-800 Exposure comp at 0 to begin with (see note below).
5. White balance: Flash, +1 comp (very accurate white balance, try it)
The SB-800 is adjusting its flash output by light reflecting back at the camera.
 With neutral subjects (clothing) leave flash exposure comp at 0.
 Brighter subject (bride) adjust up + 1/3 or + 2/3.
 Darker subject (couple wearing black for example) adjust down – 1/3 or – 2/3
You don’t want to overexpose with a flash shot. Learn to evaluate what the subjects are wearing and adjust up or down. If you learn this “zone” system of flash comp you can always get a very well exposed shot, very good consistency from picture to picture.