Strato Wireless Trigger Set Canon

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Strato Wireless Trigger Set Canon

Strato Wireless Trigger Set Canon

Only $97.95 @ Amazon


Rated 5 of 5 Stars by 3 Buyers!

Strato Wireless Trigger Set Canon

I’m coming from a set of Radiopopper Jrx Studio triggers which were just a nightmare as far as reliability goes. The design of the strategy was as well questionable and certainly didn’t help the reliability either. The one trick feature of the Radiopoppers is that I could manually alter power of a remote flash from the trigger on my camera. This was a time saver. Unfortunately most of that time was wasted just attempting to get the darned things to work right.

So that brings me to these guys. The design of these triggers is much simpler than the Radiopoppers. For these you need no cables to fire a remote Canon speedlite – even whether or not you are using a shoemount flash on-camera. Nice! Both the transmitter and the receiver have built in hot shoes. merely slide your remote speedlite onto the receiver hot shoe, turn the triggers on, and you are in business. whether or not you’d like to use an on-camera shoe mount flash AND fire a remote flash, that’s just as easy. Just slide a flash onto the transmitter’s shoe and you’re good to go.

One huge benefit of these over the initial Strato is that these transmitters allow for a pass-through ETTL signal. This means that it will pass a full ETTL signal from your camera to your shoe-mount flash sitting atop the transmitter. That will let you use an on-camera flash in ETTL mode while firing your remote flashes in manual mode (manual mode is the best way to fire remote flashes anyway).

These triggers come with 4 channels and 4 flash groups. The channels are selectable by way of a sliding button on the side of the receiver while the groups are selectable by way of an illuminating button on the back of the transmitter. There are no dipsticks to fool with!! Finally! Illuminated buttons are SO much posing no difficulty than trying to remember which dipstick combining activates which channels or groups you want.

So as for the design of these triggers, I give them a 9.5/10. The 1/2 point deduction comes from the fact that the power button is too easily switched. if you just toss these things in your bag, they will likely turn themselves on once the bag shuffles around a bit. If they stay on for too long, they will just run dead. I don’t believe there is any “auto-off” feature with these triggers. I would commend carrying an extra couple sets of AAA batteries. Both the triggers and receivers take frequent AA batteries (another design plus).

Reliability wise, these things have been near perfect for me. The electrical connections are secure and misfires are rare to never. They are also built well and may aid the weight of a 580exII flash without any unjustified strain. I would be careful not to hit the flash on anything while atop the transmitter. A tall shoe-mount flash makes for a huge moment arm and hitting it too hard would certainly either break the foot of the flash or the shoe on the trigger. This is more a result of fundamentals physics than it is a product design flaw.

So in spite of losing the remote adjustability of the Radiopoppers, I have been exceedingly happy with these triggers. The design is very well thought out and the reliability has been perfect for me. Highly recommended.

For a few years, I’ve applied the cheap PT-04 wireless triggers. They worked about 90% of the time when I was within 200 feet of them at first. Recently, they won’t reliably fire even when I’m within 10 feet of them. Two triggers and four receivers all behave the same way. Enough was enough, so I started looking around at what is currently available and plainly stumbled all over these.

I ordered the Canon transmitter and two receivers to start off with. Tried them out with two Nikon SB-28 flashes, galore Vivitar 285HV flashes, a couple of Canon’s old ATTL 430EZ flashes, and Canon’s ETTL 420EX and 430EX flashes. ALL of them fired using the Canon remote. The remote has a functionality that allows your flash to go to sleep then the remote wakes it up when it’s time to get back to business. This function only worked on the ETTL flashes that I have. Once the 430EZ (the old ATTL flash, not the 430EX) flash went to sleep, that was it is So if you actually need your flashes to be capable to go to sleep and wake up, make certain they are compatible with these remotes.

Reliability so far seems excellent. Being capable to use commonly-available AAA batteries makes these units a small bulky but that’s an worthy of acceptance or satisfactory sell off taking into account the flexibility that affords. I’m using Sanyo Eneloop rechargeable batteries which hold a charge for assorted months, and they work swell with these.

As far as how they work, they’re beauteous slick. There are 4 channels, no large deal theres What I like the most is that every remote may be assigned to one of 4 groups. Then at the transmitter, you can choose any combination of groups that you want to fire. Seeing which groups are active is very easy since they put a subtle red light at the top of each of the buttons. Each button is independent so you don’t waste time cycling through 16 combinations if it were just one button. Each remote blinks green every 5 seconds or so to make it easy to tell if you remembered to turn on the remote or not.

I won’t get into other details that other reviewers had mentioned. I just wanted to let it be known that the remotes do work with other brand flashes that accept a 6-volt trigger signal (at least all the ones I had to test with,) and it’s not just restricted to Canon. They simply won’t have the wake-up functionality that several of Canon’s ETTL flashes will enjoy.

Since it worked out so well, I ordered a couple of Nikon remotes to use with the SB-28′s that I have (my favorite favored Not certain if the sleep function will work or not, but it can be disabled in the flash itself like I’ve done for years with the el-cheapo remotes. Canon isn’t so kind to their users and don’t have that sleep-disable feature in a good deal of of their flash units.

If you’re looking for an substitute to more expensive solutions like Pocket Wizard, or wanting to step up from the cheap wireless triggers, you would do well to give these such a good deal of serious consideration. I’m expecting these to be in my lighting bag for a heap of years.

This is my first set of flash triggers. So far I am very impressed. I like the construction, design and flexability of these units. With 4 person channels and 4 groups these small guys are very flexable. The on/off switch is easy to switch in the bag, but all the switches are easy to employed I have been enjoying these very much.