* Attach a receiving PocketWizard to your camera's motor drive port and also place that same PocketWizard in the camera's hot shoe.
* Set up your remote flash and set its receiving PocketWizard to one channel higher than you're using to trigger the camera. So if the remote camera's PocketWizard is set to channel 1, set the PocketWizard attached to the flash to channel 2.
* Trigger your camera by pressing TEST on a PocketWizard in your hand.
* The receiving PocketWizard will trigger your camera and immediately switch to Transmit Mode. When it receives a sync pulse from the camera, it will transmit on one channel higher than it received on.
* The PocketWizard attached to the remote flash will receive the transmitted signal and trigger the flash in sync with the remote camera.
If you need to rapidly trigger your remote camera, I recommend enabling Bottom Shoe Disable Mode on the FlexTT5 attached to the camera. Otherwise, there will be a delay between subsequent triggers.
been able to answer my own question with a little help from Pocketwizard them self.
for future reference here is how to do it
That sounds like the same as using the Yongnuo alongside your PW, but with an extra PW receiver set on a different channel. The main difference being about £200, but I guess you would also retain E-TTL functions.
and also the rock solid reliablity of pws as opposed to the performance of chinese triggers.
The pw system is pretty neat, how the transceiver on top of the remote camera 'hops' up a channel to trigger the flashes and then pops back down again.
uck anyone wanna buy me a few multimaxes?![]()
Yeah, the really cheap ebay triggers have a poor rep, but not the Yongnuo RF-602.
A cynic might say that is the reason for the continued delay for the release of the Nikon version. Which is a real shame as the system is really cool. I'm sure they'll get it sorted but it's a nightmare right now.
Yeah, the really cheap ebay triggers have a poor rep, but not the Yongnuo RF-602.
But if you want reliability, the new E-TTL PWs (which the OP has) seem to be abysmal at anything over normal IR triggering range (with some Canon guns) through RF interference. The suggested fix of an accessory RF shield doesn't seem to help much either. Which kinda defeats the whole point.
A cynic might say that is the reason for the continued delay for the release of the Nikon version. Which is a real shame as the system is really cool. I'm sure they'll get it sorted but it's a nightmare right now.
Just to defend the new Pocket Wizards as well, I'm getting consistent firing at 50ft with a FlexTT5 attached to a 580ex II
canon's IR system in bright sunlight will give me anything from about 5 inches to a foot, with the pocket wizards I start to see drop off at about 45ft which for me with ttl is about all the range im going to need.
I have four 580EX guns and with bright sun falling on the sensor they won't fire reliably at more than about 4m - not much use really. However, just shading the sensor doubles that at least, to around 10m with direct line of sight, ditto overcast days. Indoors, no problem at all, even hidden behind furniture.You have been very lucky or I have been very unlucky
Having tried 3 580EXII, 2 FlexTT1 and 6 FlexTT5 I couldn't get reliable triggering or exposures from 20 feet. Using the AC5 shields did little to help.
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I have four 580EX guns and with bright sun falling on the sensor they won't fire reliably at more than about 4m - not much use really. However, just shading the sensor doubles that at least, to around 10m with direct line of sight, ditto overcast days. Indoors, no problem at all, even hidden behind furniture.
bit of a clat though shading the sensor when your trying to get "in the rhythm" with a model or trying to relax a member of the public and you have to play around with shading the sensor.
you guys tried having the PW on ETTL leads ?