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Review Summary
2008-04-01T21:00:00
I use this for forensic photography. it couples well with the Nikon D40x, but is a little tight in the hot shoe making it a little bit of a struggle to take it off. overall though it has just enough reach for hand held work, and stays out of the way unlike a longer cord.
DANNY
2007-08-17T21:00:00
In addition to the small release that wants to carve up your fingers, I can't seem to get the camera to sense the flash when connected. The flash will fire, but the shutter speed doesn't compensate.
HDSteve
2007-07-09T21:00:00
This is the 3rd one I've gone through in less than a year. When it works, it works. But the cord easily begins to stretch and break at the shoe mount. Same problem on all 3 cords. You have to take great care if you want it to last. Not for rugged everyday shooting!!! Next one I purchase is the real Nikon one to test it's comparitive durability.
bgoo
2007-07-09T21:00:00
The pins match up with the shoe on my D50 perfectly. I am using it with a Nikon SB600 and have experienced no problems. The only complaint I would offer is that the release lever is very small and somewhat hard on the fingers. I slid a small piece of black wire insulation over it. It looks fine and is much easier on the the fingertip!
Jim G.
2007-07-09T21:00:00
Improved my flash photography. Locking pin is not the easiest to operate for locking to the camera hot shoe. Flash mounts easily and iTTL function works very well. Used for night photograhy and back lit situations with very good results. Cost is very good also.
Lee
2007-05-07T21:00:00
Product performs exactly as described [...]
photodiva
2007-05-07T21:00:00
iTTL worked as advertised. The finish on the base was a little rough, and the set screw. The release pin on the front could have used a little explanation.
bigdaver
2007-04-10T21:00:00
Nibs didn't line up with Nikon hot shoe contacts, extremely tight fit on camera, module lock painful on fingertips, didn't work!
Grayhab
• As you know, if a photographer wants better quality flash photos, he has to take the flash off his camera. But to use his dedicated flash off his camera and mount it to a bracket, he must use an off-camera TTL cord. These off-camera TTL cords are significantly less expensive than the cords available by the camera/flash manufacturer.
With a 3 foot coiled cord and a male flash shoe on the bottom of the connector for the flash, these cords were designed to allow most better flash brackets that have a flash accessory shoe to mount either a flash or a TTL cord.