Dark mode
USA
Choose city or write postal code
We couldn't pinpoint your city. Please select city to display stores and prices in your region.
Catalog   /   Photo   /   Flashes and On-Camera Light

Comparison Godox ThinkLite Mini TT350 vs Fujifilm EF-X20

Add to comparison
Godox ThinkLite Mini TT350
Fujifilm EF-X20
Godox ThinkLite Mini TT350Fujifilm EF-X20
Compare prices 8
from $699.00 
Outdated Product
User reviews
0
0
0
1
TOP sellers
Typeregular (classic)regular (classic)
Camera compatibility
Canon
Fuji
Nikon
Olympus
Panasonic
Pentax
Sony
 
Fuji
 
 
 
 
 
Specs
Guide number3620
Reload time0.1 с5 с
Number of impulses90
Pulse duration1/350 - 1/20000 c
TTLE-TTL, I-TTL, P-TTL, TTLTTL
Power management++
Beam angle14 - 105 mm
Rotary head
Head anglevertical - 90 degrees, horizontal - 270 degrees
Features
Features
autofocus illumination
automatic zoom
slave mode
 
 
slave mode
Power supply
Power source2xAA2xAAA
General
Screen
Screen backlight
Dimensions140x62x38 mm36x59.5x50 mm
Weight210 g100 g
Added to E-Catalogjuly 2018january 2013
When you make a purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Godox TT350C Flash for Canon Camera 24G Wireless Speedlight Canon GN36 1/8000s HSS Speedlite Mini Thinklite TTL Camera Flash

Compatibility: Godox TT350C camera flash applies to Canon cameras and compatible with E-TTL autoflash. With this TTL compatib... morele flash, such as 5D MarkIII 80D 7D 760D 60D 600D 30D 100D 1100D Digital X, etc cameras. with TTL autoflash, which makes shooting easier 2.4G Wireless Transmission: Optical transmission with uniform illumination and stable output. All-in-one functions and 30 meters continuous transmission. When using Godox 2.4G Wireless X System, TT350C is compatible with other Godox products, greatly enriches your equipment mix Lightweigh, Portable, Compact Body: The compact body is only half the size of an ordinary dome light, you can easily hold it in your hand or put it in your bag, and it will not increase the burden on you, it is very suitable for portraits, travel, and location shooting etc Powerful and Comprehensive Function: Support TTL/M/S1/S2 modes, auto/manual zoom 24-105m. HSS (max. 1/8000s), flash exposure compensation (FEC), front and rear curtain synchronization, multi flash, manual flash, manual focus assistance, these functions allow you to adapt to different scenes and shoot easily Clear LCD Display: With LCD panel to offer clear and easy operation. Use the 4 function buttons to change different settings according to different situations. Rotate the jog dial to choose the parameter amount Master and Slave Flash: As a master unit, TT350C can control slave flash models: AD200, AD200Pro, AD300Pro, AD400Pro, AD600Pro, V1-C, V860II-C, V860III-C, V850II, V850III, TT685IIC, TT600 etc. As a slave unit, TT350S can be controlled by master flash models: X1T-C, XProII-C, XPro-C, V860II-C, V850II, TT685II-C, TT600 etc
Amazon.com
Delivery: in USA
Report
$84.90

Godox TT350S Flash Speedlite for Sony Camera 24G Wireless GN36 1/8000s HSS TTL Camera Flash Compatible for Sony Camera A7 A7

Compatibility and TTL autoflash: Godox TT350S camera flash compatible for Sony DSLR cameras, such as A7 A7II A7III A7R II A7R... moreIII A7R IV A7S A7S II A7S III A7C A9 A9 II A77 II A99 II A58 A6000 A6100 A6300 A6400 A6500 A6600 ZV-E10 etc cameras. with TTL autoflash, which makes shooting easier 2.4G Wireless Transmission: Optical transmission with uniform illumination and stable output. All-in-one functions and 30 meters continuous transmission. When using Godox 2.4G Wireless X System, TT350S is compatible with other Godox products, greatly enriches your equipment mix Lightweigh, Portable, Compact Body: The compact body is only half the size of an ordinary dome light, you can easily hold it in your hand or put it in your bag, and it will not increase the burden on you, it is very suitable for portraits, travel, and location shooting etc Powerful and Comprehensive Function: Support TTL/M/S1/S2 modes, auto/manual zoom 24-105m. HSS (max. 1/8000s), flash exposure compensation (FEC), front and rear curtain synchronization, multi flash, manual flash, manual focus assistance, these functions allow you to adapt to different scenes and shoot easily Clear LCD Display: With LCD panel to offer clear and easy operation. Use the 4 function buttons to change different settings according to different situations. Rotate the jog dial to choose the parameter amount Master and Slave Flash: As a master unit, TT350S can control slave flash models: AD200, AD200 Pro, AD300 Pro, AD600BM, AD400 Pro,AD600 Pro, V860II-S, V860III-S, TT685II-S, V1-S,V850II, V850III, TT685S,TT600 etc. As a slave unit, TT350S can be controlled by master flash models: X1T-S, X2T-S, XPro-S, XProII-S, X3S, V860II-S, V860III-S, V850II, TT685IIS, TT600 etc
Amazon.com
Delivery: in USA
Report
$84.90

Godox TT350F 24G HSS 1/8000s TTL GN36 Camera Flash Speedlite for Fuji Cameras X-Pro2 X-T20 X-T2 X-T1 X-Pro1 X-T10 X-E1 X-A3

Full TTL Functions, Support HSS(Max.1/8000s), Front & Rear Curtain Sync, FEC, Multi Flash, Manual Flash, etc GN36, 22 steps... moreof power output(1/1-1/128). Approx.0.1-2.2s Recycle Time, 210 Full Power Flashes. 24-105mm auto/manual zooming Optical transmission with even illuminatin and stable output. 2.4G wireless trnasmission and 100 meters further transimission With dot-matrix LCD panel to offer clear and easy operation. Use 4 function buttons to change various settings according to different situations Perfectly Compatible with other Godox Flashes. As a master unit, TT350F can control the following slave unit models: AD600 AD600M AD360II-C AD360II-N AD200. As a slave unit, TT350F can be controlled by X1T-F(Sold Separately)
Amazon.com
Delivery: in USA
Report
$84.90

GODOX TT350O Flash for Olympus Panasonic Camera TTL 24G Wireless GN36 1/8000s HSS Speedlite Mini Camera Flash Compatible for

Compatibility and TTL autoflash: Godox TT350O flash compatible for Olympus Panasonic cameras, such as Olympus: E-M10II, E-M5I... moreI, E-M1, E-PL8, E-PL7, E-PL6, E-PL5, E-P5, E-P3, PEN-F. Panasonic: DMC-GX85, DMC-G7, DMC-GF1, DMC-LX100, DMC-G85 etc cameras model. with TTL autoflash, which makes shooting easier 2.4G Wireless Flash: Optical transmission with uniform illumination and stable output. All-in-one functions and transmission range approx 30m. When using Godox 2.4G wireless X system, TT350O is compatible with other Godox products, greatly enriches your equipment mix Portable, Lightweigh Body: The compact body is only half the size of an ordinary dome light, you can easily hold it in your hand or put it in your bag, even in your pocket, and it will not increase the burden on you, it is very suitable for portraits, travel, and location shooting etc Powerful and Comprehensive Function: Support TTL/M/S1/S2 modes, auto/manual zoom 24-105 mm. HSS (max. 1/8000s), flash exposure compensation, front and rear curtain sync, multi flash, manual flash, manual focus assistance, these functions allow you to adapt to different scenes and shoot easily Clear LCD Display: With LCD panel to offer clear and easy operation. Use the 4 function buttons to change different settings according to different situations. Rotate the jog dial to choose the parameter amount Master and Slave Function: As a master unit, TT350O can control slave flash models: AD600Pro, AD600Pro II, AD300Pro, AD400Pro, AD200Pro, AD200Pro II, AD200, V860III-O, V850II, V850III, TT685IIO, TT600 etc. As a slave unit, TT350O flash can be controlled by master flash models: X1T-O, X2T-O, XPro-O, XProII-O, X3O, V860II-O, V860III-O, V1O, V850III, TT600 etc
Amazon.com
Delivery: in USA
Report
$84.90

GODOX TT350F Flash for Fujifilm Camera 24G Wireless GN36 HSS 1/8000s TTL Camera Flash Speedlite Compatible for Fuji Digital

Compatibility and TTL autoflash: Godox TT350F camera flash compatible for Fuji Fujifilm cameras and compatible with TTL autof... morelash, such as X-Pro2/X-T20/X-T2/X-T1/XPro1/ X-T10/X-E1/X-A3/X100F/X100T etc cameras model. with TTL autoflash, which makes shooting easier 2.4G Wireless Transmission: Optical transmission with uniform illumination and stable output. All-in-one functions and 30 meters continuous transmission. When using Godox 2.4G Wireless X System, TT350F is compatible with other Godox products, greatly enriches your equipment mix Lightweigh, Portable, Compact Body: The compact body is only half the size of an ordinary dome light, you can easily hold it in your hand or put it in your bag, and it will not increase the burden on you, it is very suitable for portraits, travel, and location shooting etc Powerful and Comprehensive Function: Support TTL/M/S1/S2 modes, auto/manual zoom 24-105m. HSS (max. 1/8000s), flash exposure compensation (FEC), front and rear curtain synchronization, multi flash, manual flash, manual focus assistance, these functions allow you to adapt to different scenes and shoot easily Clear LCD Display: With LCD panel to offer clear and easy operation. Use the 4 function buttons to change different settings according to different situations. Rotate the jog dial to choose the parameter amount Master and Slave Function: As a master unit, TT350F can control slave flash models: AD200, AD300Pro, AD600Pro, AD600BM, AD400Pro, AD200Pro, AD100Pro, V860II-F, V860III-F, V850II, V860III-F, TT685IIF, TT600 etc. As a slave unit, TT350F flash can be controlled by master flash models: X1T-F, X2T-F, XPro-F, XProII-F, X3F, V860II-F, V860III-F, V1-F, V850II, V850III, TT600 etc
Amazon.com
Delivery: in USA
Report
$84.90
3 more offer(s)

Camera compatibility

Camera models that the flash can work with. Note that this parameter is usually indicated in the characteristics very approximately — only camera manufacturers are named, but there is no talk of models as such. Therefore, before purchasing a flash, it makes sense to separately clarify whether it will work normally with your camera — for example, on the manufacturer's website or thematic forums. This is especially true for devices from third-party manufacturers — for such models, the likelihood of problems is somewhat higher than for “native” flash cameras. At the same time, devices from the same company usually have the same requirements for connecting flashes, and therefore this parameter is with a fairly high degree of accuracy allows you to evaluate compatibility.

If the specifications of the flash indicate compatibility with several brands of cameras, this usually means that this model is available in several variations, each of which is designed for a different manufacturer.

It is worth noting that the "non-native" camera and flash may be quite compatible and work fine in most shooting modes. Nevertheless, support for TTL (see below) and a number of other specific functions in this case is usually out of the question, and in general, the reliability and efficiency of this combination is lower than that of a camera with a "native" flash. Therefore, it is better to choose all the same accessories with directly claimed compatibility.

Of t...he compatible cameras currently in use: Canon, Fuji, Leica, Nikon, Olympus, Panasonic, Pentax, Samsung, Sigma, Sony.

Guide number

The guide number is the main characteristic that describes the power of the light pulse of the flash. It is described as the maximum distance (in metres) at which, at ISO 100 and f/1 lens speed (aperture 1), a flash is able to illuminate an "average" subject sufficiently for a normal exposure; in other words, at what distance from the flash it will be possible to normally shoot the scene at the specified ISO and aperture.

There are formulas by which, knowing the guide number, you can derive the practical shooting distance for each specific value of sensitivity and aperture. The simplest formula used to calculate the distance at ISO 100 is: S=N/f, where S is the distance, N is the guide number, f is the aperture value. For example, for a guide number of 56 and an f/2.8 lens, this distance would be 56/2.8 = 20 m. Increasing or decreasing sensitivity by a factor of 2 would increase or decrease the specified distance by approximately 1.4 times, respectively. If you need to calculate the distance as accurately as possible, you should refer to more detailed formulas that can be found in specialized sources.

Separately, it is worth noting that the leading numbers of flashes, usually, are indicated by manufacturers for specific focal lengths of lenses. This is due to the fact that the shorter the focal length and, accordingly, the wider the viewing angle, the more light is needed to illuminate the scene being shot and the more powerful the flash pulse should b...e (at the same distance). Therefore, when choosing by the guide number, it makes sense to pay attention to the focal length indicated by the manufacturer and select a model with a power reserve — especially since guide numbers are often prescribed for rather “long-range” lenses (with a focal length of about 80-100 mm in equiv. 35 mm).

Reload time

The time it takes the flash or generator (for studio flashes) to prepare for the next flash. The smaller it is, the better. This parameter is especially important for continuous shooting, when the interval between frames is small: if you often shoot in this mode, you should look for a flash with the shortest possible recycle time. Also note that the characteristics usually indicate the shortest recharge time; in some operating modes, it may be significantly more than stated.

Number of impulses

The number of flashes that the flash can fire without recharging the battery or changing batteries (see "Power"). This parameter is very approximate, because. in fact, it strongly depends on a number of factors: pulse duration, use of the display and its backlight (if any, see below), autofocus backlight (see "Features"), etc., and with replaceable batteries — even and on their quality. Often, manufacturers indicate in the characteristics the “perfect”, the maximum possible number of pulses — i.e. with their minimum duration, non-use of additional functions and even the optimal temperature regime for the battery. In reality, this figure may be lower. Nevertheless, the data indicated in the characteristics makes it quite possible to evaluate the battery life of the flash and even compare different models with each other.

Pulse duration

The duration of the pulse of light provided by the flash. This indicator can range from thousandths to hundred thousandths of a second; it is usually expressed as a fractional number with a unit in the numerator, such as 1/880 s. The human eye does not notice the difference, but in some shooting modes it can become critical. For example, to capture fast-moving scenes (such as splashing water, the flight of an insect, or the movement of machine parts) you need to choose a flash with the shortest flash duration possible — otherwise the image may be blurry.

The longest pulse duration in modern photoflashes is about 1/800 s; the minimum value can reach 1/30,000 s or even less.

TTL

Flash units with TTL support. TTL is an abbreviation for "through the lens", i.e. "through the lens"; this is the name of the method of measuring exposure by the amount of light that passes directly through the camera lens.

In digital photography, TTL works like a pre-flash: before the main exposure, the flash fires one or more test flashes. The amount of light coming from the object being filmed is measured by special sensors, based on these data, the control electronics sets the necessary shooting parameters, after which the actual exposure takes place. This allows you to fine-tune the camera and get an image of optimal quality. The interval between the test and operating pulses is so small that it may not be visible to the naked eye at all (especially when the flash is synchronized with the front curtain or with a slow shutter speed).

Many modern camera manufacturers have their own developments and varieties of TTL technology, respectively, differing in name: for example, Canon has E-TTL and E-TTL II, Nikon has D-TTL (in early models) and i-TTL (in later ones) , Pentax has P-TTL, etc. Support for one or another variety is directly related to the compatibility of the flash with cameras (see above), and different formats are usually not compatible with each other.

Beam angle

The angle at which the main beam of light from the flash diverges. This parameter is not expressed directly, in degrees, but in terms of the focal lengths of the corresponding lenses, in millimetres: for example, a beam angle of 105 mm corresponds to the angle of view of a lens with the same focal length (35 mm equivalent). This makes it easy to select a flash for specific optics, so that it most effectively illuminates all the space in the frame. And the most advanced modern flashes can have a variable dispersion angle, allowing you to adjust them to different shooting features; this feature is especially useful when using zoom lenses. Changing the angle of dispersion is carried out by a movable lens installed in the flash head, it can be carried out both automatically and manually (for more details, see "Functions and Capabilities").

Rotary head

Possibility to turn the flash head (bulb) to the side.

Shooting with a flash aimed directly at the stage, “head on”, is far from always the best option: in particular, this mode gives sharp unpleasant shadows, and in portrait shooting it leads to the “red-eye” effect. At the same time, by turning the head towards the ceiling, you can get soft diffused light. There are other uses for swivel heads.

The simplest flash models with this feature can usually only be rotated in the vertical plane. More advanced options include rotation and horizontally. Here we note that the larger the angle, the more opportunities for setting the location of the head gives the flash. Vertically, it usually does not exceed 90°, and in the horizontal plane it can reach a full 360°.

Features

Autofocus assist light. The presence of an auxiliary illumination function in the flash for the camera's autofocus system. Modern cameras in the vast majority use the so-called passive autofocus systems, which have one serious drawback: very low efficiency in low light and/or low contrast of the subject being photographed. Autofocus assist light is designed to solve this problem: before focusing, the scene is illuminated by a separate lamp, located, in this case, directly in the flash body. This ensures a sufficient amount of light for normal autofocus operation. Most often, the backlight lamps give off light of a characteristic reddish hue, but some advanced models use infrared illumination - invisible to the eye, but perceived by the camera. In addition, backlight systems can use a special light pattern instead of a solid beam, which further simplifies the task of autofocus systems. In any case, the presence of this function is especially important given that the flash is often used as a light source in low light.

— On-camera control. The ability to change the flash settings using the controls of the camera to which it is connected. In some cases (for example, with a wireless connection), this is much more convenient than switching attention from the camera to the flash.

Automatic zoom. The ability to automatically change the flash light scattering angle. For the scattering angle..., see the corresponding point above, but here we note that this function provides synchronization between the flash and the lens: when the focal length of the lens changes, the scattering angle automatically changes. This ensures the most effective illumination of the scene and at the same time saves you from having to manually readjust the flash each time to the changed viewing angle.

Manual zoom. The ability to change the flash spread angle (see "Light spread angle") manually. This function expands the possibilities for "fine" adjustment of operating parameters and allows you to set parameters that are not available with automatic zoom (see above). In addition, it will be useful if you have to use several fixed lenses with different focal lengths - the flash can be easily adjusted for each of them.

Operation in master mode. The ability to operate the flash as a master for a system of several flashes. The entire system is controlled via the master flash, the parameters of the slave flashes are set, and the command to fire is given (note that the master flash itself may not give a pulse at all). If you plan to shoot using a system of several flashes, you will definitely need a model with this function — without it, creating a system is impossible. Of course, the master and slave flashes must be mutually compatible; this point should be clarified separately.

Slave mode. The ability to operate the flash as a slave in a system of several flashes. In this mode, the device is connected to the master flash and is triggered by a command from it. For more information on flash systems, see "Master mode operation" above.

— Radio synchronizer. A device designed for wireless control of a flash or a set of flashes (if each of them has its own receiver). Usually it is a separate module installed in a hot shoe; upon a command to trigger, this module sends a radio signal to all receivers tuned to it, ensuring synchronous triggering of the flashes. At the same time, some models of lamps with this function are capable of receiving via radio not only the trigger signal, but also the operating parameters (primarily the duration and power of the pulse).
Godox ThinkLite Mini TT350 often compared
Fujifilm EF-X20 often compared