Capture Every Moment 📷 - Because Every Shot Counts!
The Pixel TW-283 DC2 Wireless Remote Control is a versatile shutter release cable designed for Nikon cameras, including popular models like the D7500 and D610. It offers wireless functionality, extended battery life, and a compact design, making it an essential tool for photographers seeking convenience and reliability.
C**N
Intervalo metro
Solo hay que tomar en cuenta que no existan modelos iguales cerca porque a veces están enrrutados en el mismo canal e interfieren la señal tendrían que ponerse de acuerdo para que no se sobrepongan las señales
N**K
Works great
Works great and I have no complaints. Obviously just make sure your AF is off or it can properly AF otherwise it will do the same as the camera normally does and not take a picture.
D**.
Hair trigger on my unit and a couple of petty peeves, but I'd buy it again.
This Pixel Pro replaces the equivalent Vello, which quit on me mid-shoot. I haven't tried its fancy features yet. I do night photography, and I can't wait to try time lapses/sequencing on northern lights and meteors. Once the Pixel gets used to itself on the camera it works in the basic modes I've used it (Nikon D750). Mine was ready to go out of the box, with installing the batteries and turning the units on the only required setup. It's important to note that they chose to put the battery butt springs at the same end of the battery tray, but the batteries still go in flip-flop. So you need to LOOK at the orientation of the batteries. You can't assume the neg end goes to the spring.My unit has a hair trigger. If you look at it too hard it takes a picture. I don't know if it has a half-cock focus or not -- I haven't gotten it to work. Maybe I don't have a fine enough touch, but it ought to have the same feel as my on-board shutter button and it does not. It seems that as soon as my finger is on the button, I'm committed to the shot. I don't get a chance to correct focus. That means that on autofocus I still need to be looking at the viewfinder to ensure proper focus. Not ideal in a wildlife setting -- I'd rather have the camera close to the critters and me somewhere else.The cable on mine requires a LOT of force to seat on the camera side. I'm not used to being that forceful with delicate, multi-thousand dollar equipment, but until I really jammed it home, I thought it was a nonfunctional unit. Once I discovered how to plug it in, it has fired every time. But I need to leave the receiver unit dangling from the cable -- it doesn't fit the hotshoe, too thick. Unless I have to really jamb it on too, which I'm opposed to doing. I've taken to hanging the soft end cover from my wildlife lens from the tripod head as a holder.The good is that it has virtually no lag between pressing the button and the capture. I've been taking hummingbird pictures with it. They're quick little fellas -- quicker than toddlers, even. If there's any lag at all, the bird isn't in the picture. I'm in favor of immediate response from my equipment. In this respect the Pixel is much better than my (3x cost) Case remote, which takes a full tick or more to actuate the shutter. I got the Case unit because 40% my birds were out of focus. The Case allows me to correct the focus on a computer screen, but now I miss 30% of my shots due to the lag time. I'm going to experiment with setting up the shot with the Case Remote and triggering it with the Pixel. That would be the best of both worlds, should they play together nicely.Overall, for a remote shutter it's not a bad product for the price. Everything less costly is junk (I've tried them). As you climb into nosebleed prices the remotes seem more suited to studio work than field photography. This Pixel seems to be a good balance of price, features, function, and annoyance.
J**K
Buy a replacement DC2->3.5mm cable ahead of time - you will need it
I had to spend another $12 on a replacement DC2->3.5mm cable. The supplied cable cause my camera, a Nikon D7200, to glitch out in just about every way possible.The first few remote shots were fine.After about 5 shots, the first issue I noticed was that the automatic review was not working. When I tried to manually review, the camera got stuck on a blank view screen. Menu, etc buttons stopped responding. The camera was effective dead on the outside, but apeture and shutter speed dials still worked through the viewfinder. Next, auto-focus started failed. The camera simply refused to focus. Then, the shutter button on the remote immediately fired a shot, despite half pressing (which should have engaged AF). Finally, the shutter refused to respond to the remote.I pulled the 3.5mm end out of the wireless receiver and the glitches remained. As soon as I pulled the DC2 end out, the camera was restored to perfect working order. Bad cable, obviously.The new cable I bought makes this system work as it should have out of the box. It's completely unacceptable to ship a product with such a cable. I got lucky and only had issues during use. Such poor product testing could have damaged my camera...
C**P
Looks Great, Didn't Work, Zero Support
This looked like it ought to work great. No problems getting it connected, getting the sender and receiver to communicate, etc. Just one problem - it didn't work on my Nikon. Looked at the online info, looked at Nikon info, etc. Contacted customer support twice and never received a reply. So I returned it.
ترست بايلوت
منذ أسبوع
منذ يوم واحد