Blue Bird on my Bird-feeder in Roswell, GA [Fujifilm X-E3, 55-200mm, ISO 1000, ƒ/4.8, 1/200 – Flashpoint Zoom Li-on R2 TTL & Flashpoint R2 TTL transmitter]
Before Christmas, my friend Dennis Fahringer forwarded me a special Adorama had on their Flashpoint Zoom Li-on R2 TTL & Flashpoint R2 TTL transmitter. The flash was $119, and the transmitter was $46.
I bought the Godox VING V860IIN TTL Li-Ion Flash Kit for Nikon with its transmitter because I loved the Neewer TT850, which is pretty much the same flash as the TTL capabilities.
Neewer, Godox, and Flashpoint are all the same company but are marketed differently. Flashpoint is the Adorama-branded system with more warranties than the others.
I have not bought the studio version of the system yet, but I plan to do so soon. This week, they introduced the newest version of the studio Flashpoint XPLOR 600PRO TTL Battery-Powered Monolight (Bowens Mount) – Godox AD600 Pro. This sells for $899 without the transmitter.
The XPLOR 600Pro TTL is the next evolution of the Flashpoint R2 radio system, compatible with the R2 Canon, Nikon, Sony, Fujifilm, and Olympus/Panasonic TTL auto flash systems for remote power control and shooting.
Using the bird feeder in my backyard, I tested how well the camera worked with the HSS of 1/4000. The flash supports the FP mode (high-speed flash sync), in which the flash outputs continuous light while the first and second curtains travel across the sensor, enabling flash photography at any shutter speed.
The range of the radio transmitter from the camera to the flash is 330ft / 100m. Recycle time is <4 seconds. This is great for more than 600+ full-power flashes with the Lithium battery.
You need to use their studio heads if you want something faster. The Flashpoint XPLOR 600PRO TTL Battery-Powered Monolight recycle time is approximately 0.01- 0.9 seconds.
When you think of the exposure triangle, you believe all are affected as you change the others.
There is a kink in this because when you use a flash, the light volume is pretty much the same as you shorten the duration. The problem through the years was the ability to shrink the shutter speed and sync with the flash. This has now been pretty much solved in the last few years. So, shortening the shutter speed impacts the available light (The Sun) if outside and not the flash as much.
Earlier, I showed how I did this with the Nikon system. I can do the same with my Fuji X-E3 and the Flashpoint Zoom Li-on R2 TTL & Flashpoint R2 TTL transmitter.
Now, the cool thing about picking up the studio flash Flashpoint XPLOR 600PRO TTL Battery-Powered Monolight (Bowens Mount)—Godox AD600 Pro is that it works with all the transmitters for Nikon, Fuji, Sony, Canon, and Olympus. So, my two camera systems can use the same studio flash in TTL mode.
I look forward to shooting more with my Fuji X-E3 and the Flashpoint Zoom Li-on R2 TTL & Flashpoint R2 TTL transmitter in the months ahead. I love such a small system for travel.