Hensel Certo entry-level flashes have Cactus radios built-in
Hensel has announced the Certo line of entry-level 200Ws and 400Ws studio flashes, with built-in Cactus radio receivers.
News and reviews for photographic lighting users
Hensel has announced the Certo line of entry-level 200Ws and 400Ws studio flashes, with built-in Cactus radio receivers.
The Aurora Dante 400 will be a portable studio lamp with AC/DC power and a built-in Cactus V6 TTL/HSS flash transceiver.
After failing to reach its Kickstarter target, the Cactus RQ250 Wireless Monolight is no more.
Cactus Image is seeking Kickstarter crowd funding to develop their battery-powered wireless flash, the RQ250.
Cactus Image, the company behind the V6-series radio triggers, has announced a new ‘palm-sized’ portable flash, the RQ250.
Pentax flashes and cameras now support TTL when combined with Sigma, Fujifilm or Sony, thanks to the Cactus “X-TTL” cross-brand TTL flash triggering system.
Cactus, Godox, Metz, Nissin and PocketWizard have all released new firmware for their radio-enabled flashes and wireless triggers. Notably, Godox now supports manual HSS for Fujifilm.
Cactus V6 II triggers now support automatic TTL control between different camera and flash brands.
The Cactus RF60X adds an AF assist lamp, faster recycling and a new user interface to the RF60 HSS wireless flash.
The new Cactus V6 II radio trigger lets you use a camera from one brand and a flash from another รขโฌโ and keep high-speed sync!
Cactus has announced a new online store, with some introductory (and exclusive) discounts.
The Cactus V6 is a trigger capable of remotely controlling Nikon, Canon and Pentax flashes, or the Cactus RF60 which has built-in radio. Are they any good?