Price:
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115.00
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Questions & Answers
A yes, it can
A NO,it isn't suitable for Nikon D3300
A Yes, this item can suitable for Canon 80D.
I haven't tried it myself, but I don't think there would be a better combo for this purpose. I mean a 100mm macro with this specific of flash, Yongnuo or not.
By EL on July 18, 2017
No, its not good for portrait shots. You do not want lighting blasting into the face of a subject. Lighting should come from a 45 degree angle to the subjects face.
By Sky Captain on August 31, 2017
28
By NixImages on May 3, 2018
just you need 55mm ring
By Frank on May 3, 2018
Not for me, I returned it
By Panda8 on May 2, 2018
I KNOW IT FITS FOR Nikon D3200. I OWN NIKON D3200
By DIANA S. on May 2, 2018
Strange. Worked fine for me with 6D. I would try it on another camera. Make sure you fit it well into the camera hot shoe. Otherwise, maybe the flash is defective.
By Curious67 on May 2, 2018
yes thank you
By Baylón on April 26, 2018
I'm sure what custom functions you think you need!? In macro photography there is no need for HSS or focusing the beam, however it does have TTL.
By SnowCrow on April 24, 2018
Are you using a light meter and setting your camera to the values the meter provides? If not, that would be an awesome place to start....
By Tony Palmieri on April 20, 2018
Discussions
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open this forum in full pageAverage Rating:
4.7based on 133 Customer Reviews
Share your thoughts with other customers and get Tomtop Points, the first 5 reviews get DOUBLE Tomtop Points!
Write a Customer ReviewBy ***
February 22, 2019
By l***1
April 13, 2018
By e***v
January 19, 2018
By Rick Masseur
January 10, 2018
I love this flash. I read some of the reviews about the plastic adapter rings breaking. Well, I think Yongnuo listened; the adapter rings are no longer plastic. They are metal. I use Yongnuo as my standard flash, so I knew I wouldn't have any issues with this macro ring flash. And at a fraction of the cost of the Canon version! Using this on Canon 5D III with Sigma 150mm EX DG APO 2.8 macro.
By JMa
January 9, 2018
By Paul N. Keffer
January 8, 2018
By URS
January 8, 2018
By SnowCrow
January 7, 2018
By Papa Doc
January 6, 2018
By Z
January 6, 2018
By cholley
January 5, 2018
By Robert
January 5, 2018
By Arturo Carpes
January 4, 2018
By Lee Muise
January 3, 2018
By Rhonda stored
January 3, 2018
By Gixerman
January 2, 2018
By rodrigo c.
January 2, 2018
By Mam
January 2, 2018
This is a great ring flash, the build quality is good, works great, offers variety of lighting options, really made a difference in my macro shots. used it to photograph rocky shore species (barnacles, limpets, crabs, anemones, etc.) and I can see the difference between the shots before and after I have started using this. I have a few disappointments with the build/design of this flash though that I have listed below in cons, which is why I gave 4 stars. Pros: various power settings makes it easy to shoot macros in different focus distance and lighting conditions. The two lights on either side and the ability to turn off one makes it really easy to light macros when there is natural light coming from one side. The build quality is good, with well built cable attachment and secures well on hot shoe. Cons: Battery door is asking to break off, you really really need to be careful opening/closing the door, the batteries fully push the door off while you try to close the door. This is a poor design and could be easily fixed if the manufacturer had used a mechanism to secure the batteries to the body before the door is closed rather than using the door to secure the batteries. The ring mounts on lens using filter thread: there are two critically important flaws in this design: 1. once you mount the flash metal ring you cant close lens cap. Every time you need to unscrew the metal mount from the filter thread and screw it back again (not easy as you have to align it really exactly to be able to screw it). It could be much easier if the flash could be mounted using some type of push mechanism with soft/elastic ends that holds on the lens head. 2. You can only mount the flash on lenses that the ring has the metal ring available (52mm, 58mm, 67mm, 72mm), so for example if you use an extension mounted Canon 50mm f/1.8 lens (which has 49mm filter thread) for macro use, you wont be able to use this flash (unless you use a filter adaptor). Summary This is a good quality flash with affordable price, but has a few design drawbacks which could be easily fixed. I like it and I am happy I bought it, which is why I gave 4 stars, but I also thought to include constructive critics that could potentially help the design to be improved if the manufacturer takes feedback from the customers. UPDATE: Ok, after less than 2 months that I had bought this flash, what I was expecting happened last week: all of a sudden for no reason I noticed the battery door is open while I was shooting macros, tried to close it but realized it does not stay closed, checked then realized that the little plastic nub that was holding the door is broken and fell off while I was inspecting.. There had been no shock to the flash or anything, this just came off! I suppose the pressure from the batteries just breaks the door after a while. What a poor design for otherwise an excellent flash!! So long story short, I wasn't going to throw it away as I am not making money from photography and I have a decent hand in DIY, so I got to work with my limited tools in my apartment. After pondering how I can hold the door in place, I came up with a plan to screw the end of the door to the body (result in 1st image). Before making the screw hole I had to make sure that there is no electronics behind the plastic inside the body, so I had to open the 4 screws that hold the base of the flash to the body (2nd image). Then looked inside and made sure that there is no wires or electronics on that area. I used my iron soldering gun to make a hole in the side of the battery door then screwed a screw in it while the plastic was soft. Next, I was going to make a hole in the door, but I realized that the door has two layers, one plastic which is on top, and there is a metal layer which sits on the batteries and clips to the plastic top cover. After trial and error, I worked out how to take the plastic cover off the metal layer (there are holding nubs in the metal layer that I had to break them off to make separating the plastic cover easier next time). The metal layer was covering the screw hole that I had just made, so I had to break off the edge of the metal cover by pliers (not easy, the metal layer is decently thick, but I made it at the end). Once I removed enough of the edge, the screw could go through the plastic hole and, once tight, held the metal cover tightly while the batteries in place. Now the challenge was to put back the plastic cover. I figured out there are small nubs on the plastic door that hold on the metal cover, sliding on it. However, the challenge was that the plastic door had to be placed before the metal cover was secured in place by my DIY screw, which wasn't practical with my DIY adjustment as I had to tighten the metal cover while the plastic cover was off. So I had to adjust the plastic holding rails of the plastic door by screw driver so the plastic door slides to the metal while the metal is already screwed in place (sounds complex but really easy). With this adjustment in the plastic door, once the metal cover is secured (as in image 1), I can easily slide the plastic cover in place and the flash looks as original! Now if Youghoo had done its job properly I didn't have to go through this with my primitive tools, but what I can do. And I didn't take any stars off for the hassle that I went through, the original 4 stars are still shining.
By Jim Walker
January 1, 2018
By Matt
January 1, 2018
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