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Review Summary
2009-02-20T19:00:00
It only gives me an extra inch or so when shooting horizontal, but I really bought it to shoot vertical. It's thin enough that I can keep my D300 w/grip glued to my face while accessing the controls. It's like the bracket isn't even there. The only bad thing is that when I flip to shoot vertical, there's a bit of a gap between the bracket and my battery grip. This makes the flash arm a bit wobbly. I'll probably super-glue some pennies to that part of the bracket to fix this problem. All in all, it does what I bought it for.
Jefferson
2008-01-20T19:00:00
I've used this for a few photo shoots I did and it's very useful to be able to flip the flash up when turning the camera on edge and keep your flash above the lens. I have a Nikon D50 with the extended battery grip and it had enough room to clear when mounted. Only problem I had is that it wouldn't fit flush with the camera at my hand as clamed. The slot in the bottom wasn't long enough to allow it to slide over. I used a drimmel tool to notch out the slot and allow it to fit flush other than that it works very well now. It may work better with larger cameras but the gap was big enough I don't think so.
Tim
These flash brackets are designed to fit tight to the camera body enabling the photographer to use the camera as though there were no bracket attached. This eliminates a lot of the problems associated with flash photography. The top of the bracket "flips" the flash so that the flash remains above the lens when framing pictures vertically.
Bracket is available in two heights: 6 inch and 7 inch. The 7 inch can allow for the use of a power pack on the camera.
Additionally, brackets include a TTL cord for Canon or Nikon.