Last price update was: October 23, 2024 4:17 pm
×
Product prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change. Any price and availability information displayed on Amazon at the time of purchase will apply to the purchase of this product.
Godox X2T-N TTL Wireless Flash Trigger for Nikon, Bluetooth Connection, 1/8000s HSS,5 Separate Group Buttons, Relocated Control-Wheel, New Hotshoe…
Product is rated as #20 in category Photographic Lighting Remote Triggers
- All prices mentioned above are in United States dollar.
- This product is available at Amazon.com.
- At amazon.com you can purchase Godox X2T-N 2.4G Wireless Flash Trigger Transmitter Compatible with Nikon Camera Support i-TTL HSS 1/8000s Group Function LED Control Panel for only $59.00
- The lowest price of Godox X2T-N 2.4G Wireless Flash Trigger Transmitter Compatible with Nikon Camera Support i-TTL HSS 1/8000s Group Function LED Control Panel was obtained on October 23, 2024 4:17 pm.
Godox X2T-N TTL Wireless Flash Trigger for Nikon, Bluetooth Connection, 1/8000s HSS,5 Separate Group Buttons, Relocated Control-Wheel, New Hotshoe…
$59.00
Godox X2T-N TTL Wireless Flash Trigger for Nikon, Bluetooth Connection, 1/8000s HSS,5 Separate Group Buttons, Relocated Control-Wheel, New Hotshoe… Prices
$59.00
October 23, 2024 4:17 pm
×
Product prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change. Any price and availability information displayed on Amazon.com (Amazon.in, Amazon.co.uk, Amazon.de, etc) at the time of purchase will apply to the purchase of this product.
1 new
from $59.00
Price History
-
Description
Godox X2T-N TTL Wireless Flash Trigger for Nikon, Bluetooth Connection, 1/8000s HSS,5 Separate Group Buttons, Relocated Control-Wheel, New Hotshoe…. From the model Godox.
- ???? |Constructed-in Bluetooth for APP Control|: You Can Join the X2T-N to Your Telephone or Pill through Bluetooth after Obtain the “GodoxPhotograph” APP, Then management the Flash Mode, Energy Output, the Modeling Gentle Mode, the Beep of Godox Flashes, and and many others. It’s Extraordinarily Helpful When Doing Product Pictures within the Studio Whereas the Radio Trigger is Onerous to Attain on the High of the Digital camera
- ???? |TTL Autoflash and Professional Capabilities|: Help TTL Autoflash, 1/8000s Excessive-Pace Sync, Multi Flash, Guide Flash, Flash Publicity Compensation, Scan setting, One-shot and Multi-shot setting, Control of the Modeling Lamp, Adjusting All Groups’ Output Worth Concurrently, ect.
- ????|New Consumer Interface, Straightforward to Function|: LCD with Clear Show Impact, With 5 Group Setting Buttons, and three Perform Buttons to Notice Fast Setting. Relocated Control-Wheel. New Hotshoe Locking Mechanism. New AF Help Gentle that Makes use of Seen Gentle As a substitute of A Crimson/Infrared Sample. USB-C Connection that’s Extra as much as Date and Extra Dependable than A MicroUSB
- ???? |Successfully Keep away from Sign Interference|: With 5 group, 32 channels and entry to 99 wi-fi ID settings to restrict the interference from different close by techniques. Solely Obtain Triggering when the Channels and Wireless IDs of the Grasp and Slave unit are Set to the Identical
- ???? |3.5mm Sync & USB Kind-C Port|: It could actually work as a wi-fi Godox Flash Trigger/ Wireless Shutter Launch Trigger/ Wireless Nikon Speedlights Trigger/ Flash Trigger with 3.5mm Sync Twine Jack
Additional information
Specification: Godox X2T-N TTL Wireless Flash Trigger for Nikon, Bluetooth Connection, 1/8000s HSS,5 Separate Group Buttons, Relocated Control-Wheel, New Hotshoe…
|
Godox X2T-N TTL Wireless Flash Trigger for Nikon, Bluetooth Connection, 1/8000s HSS,5 Separate Group Buttons, Relocated Control-Wheel, New Hotshoe… Videos
World News
Reviews (13)
13 reviews for Godox X2T-N TTL Wireless Flash Trigger for Nikon, Bluetooth Connection, 1/8000s HSS,5 Separate Group Buttons, Relocated Control-Wheel, New Hotshoe…
Show all
Most Helpful
Highest Rating
Lowest Rating
Add a review
You must be logged in to post a review.
JAP –
Bought this to co-ordinate three flash units for an event. It only worked some of the time. Sometimes one flash would fire, sometimes two of three, etc.
B. Wooten –
Works great with my flashpoint and other godox strobes & flashes. Much easier to use than previous model.
MR –
Bought this for my Nikon D850 and Godox V860IIN speed light. It is a breeze to install and use it. However, Bluetooth does not work on my S10+ – seriously? It does work with S7 Edge and old LG G4 and even in S9+. Godox should come up with some firmware updates. It should control almost all Godox products if I am not wrong. Only time will say about the quality of the product. I am happy that I can control my flashes remotely – off-camera using iTTL with my Nikon. I am not sure whether it is fully compatible with Nikon flashlights.
Apart from that, it is easier to control the flashes off-camera. The seller is prompt to ship and Amazon rocks as usual. You will not regret buying it.
Marc G. –
update: – the answer of Godox support confirm that the Flash on the shoe work only in manual power mode, not in the TTL mode.. the only way to trig the flash in TTL is with the X1R-N.. (can you imagine the setup with a receiver on the transmitter on the camera? ..me no!!).. they confirm what i was suspected (no camera icon appear on the Nikon Flash, so no communication and no TTL available).. now why to put all the contacts on the top shoe if not better than an optical trigger?? ..don’t want to disturb they engineers but maybe a new release will correct that one day.. anyway it’s a good idea to have the red led assistance and have it as backup or second trigger.. im a bit frustrated because i was buyed it specifically for that possibility.. the Xpro is more easy to use and recommend it!
i have buyed the X2T-N and writed to Godox support with videos about my Nikon SB-900 on the shoe (on the X2T-N) which don’t work in TTL.. less that all work well.. (the Xpro is a better choice if i can’t use a flash on it in TTL).. i will update this later, if i find why!
solfrog –
I like the ability to remotely control various flashes with this device mounted on your camera. The controls are easy to manipulate and the screen is easy to read. Godox has designed a reliable and flexible wireless flash trigger that is well-built and modestly priced. The only complaint I have with this device, as with other Godox equipment that I have, is that the manual is poorly written having been loosely translated from a Chinese version. More effort needs to be put into an English manual for a fine product such as this.
Photogranut –
This Godox radio trigger does exactly what it is supposed to do. I am a hobbyist photographer and take good care of my equipment, and this trigger system has held up well over the past 6 months. I shoot a Nikon D850 and have used this system with the Nikon SB700 flash gun, as well as other flashes from Neewer, and I’ve never had any major issues. I miss an occasional frame because the signal is lost (I think the receiver units go into standby mode after a few minutes), but a simple press of the test button on the transmitter wakes them back up and solves the issue. These units do support TTL shooting and are quite accurate most of the time. However, shooting multiple frames of the same scene (in a light-controlled studio environment) can sometimes yield slightly different exposures. Since I only see the issue when using the Godox triggers, and not when using any of the other cameras or flashes, I have to assume it is the Godox triggers that are responsible for the variations. And while this can be a little annoying, the exposures never seem to be off by more than 1/2 stop or so, not a critical miss or something that can’t be easily fixed in post.
As an amateur photographer, I have found these Godox triggers to be reliable, durable, and well worth the limited investment. These are a fraction of the cost of other triggers out there. I owned pocketwizards for a few years and promptly sold them once I had a chance to test out the Godox system. The pocketwizards were more consistent, and if I was a pro photographer making my living behind a camera, I might have kept them. But I traded the Godox triggers (new) for the pocketwizards (used) at close to an even exchange, and the Godox system does TTL while the pocketwizards do not. A no-brainer!!!
John D –
Less that 5 minutes to install, including opening the box. I installed the Godox X2T-N on my camera and then used a receiver ( X1R-N trigger receiver) on my remote flash. Selected the channel to matchand it worked first time.
If I had a Godox flash with built in receiver I would not have needed the X1R but I have non-Godox flashes too. Exposure was perfect via TTL
Kindle Customer –
The product, as is so often true of Godax lately, seems well designed and does what it claims to do. It’s certainly an improvement in usability and function over older transmitters it replaces.
However . . . as also seems to be true too often, the owners manual that comes with it is written in pseudo-English that is hard to make sense of. I was able to find a youtube video that explained all the functions well and let me make sense of what the manual was trying to tell me.
I don’t understand why these companies can’t hire a person who understands photography and is a native speaker of English to produce their manuals.
S. Neff –
This is the second Godox remote I bought and lived it now. The first Godox remote was not compatible with the Godox strobe I bought; I didn’t pay enough attention to the specs.
I was lucky to have someone at a meetup shower me how to use it. Lighting seems communicated dealing with multiple channels, groups, and balancing manual exposures from multiple lights. It’s easy once you know how though. Practice, take test shots, get used to it. This is a great remote for professional use.
N –
Works great with my flash. easy to setup. Low profile. Good battery life.
mcjohns3 –
I got the X2T to replace my X1T I currently have to control my V860II speedlight (the Nikon version, for what it’s worth). I thought the X1T was too confusing to use and navigating the menu was very difficult to do quickly. The redesigned X2T tried to eliminate some of the menu navigation headaches by adding specific buttons for each group (buttons A through E) as well as updating the position and size of the scroll wheel to make it bigger and located on the bottom side of the unit. The addition of Bluetooth to the X2T is nice and will allow the unit to be controlled via the Godox app, however I have not tested this out yet.
I couldn’t give this 5 stars as the scroll wheel still feels a little flimsy and I would like for it to have much more of a click when scrolling through the menu options, and the overall menu is still difficult to get used to but won’t be a major issue as time progresses (enter “practice makes perfect” phrase).
Kim Ambrocio –
When it comes to third party flash systems, OEM flash systems seem to not understand what a lot of studio photographer/on location photographers are looking for.
Godox, at least from what they’ve released, seem to understand what users need and this product is another iteration of that. It is a sleek flash trigger that merges the size and portability of the X1T as well as the ease of use of their pro trigger. It lets you change your flashes on the fly with the group buttons on top of the camera as well as having everything on the left side, basically allowing you to one-hand operate the camera while your other hand can easily change settings without even removing your face from the viewfinder (something that the previous model had a hard time providing as the dial was on the right side of the body).
I would recommend this above any other flash trigger in Godox’s current line up.
Charles Seamans –
Now that I have the Godox X2t-n I no longer have to buy the latest and greatest flash units for my camera. Instead I can buy used older models, save a lot of money and still get the results that I insist on. My flash units can be up to a hundred yards away and I can adjust them from my camera. I am truly impressed and blessed.