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Load image into Gallery viewer, RadioPopper Jr 2 Transmitter
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, RadioPopper Jr 2 Transmitter
Vendor
RadioPopper

RadioPopper Jr 2 Transmitter

3.3
Regular price
€222,00
Sale price
€222,00
Regular price
€366,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€144,00)
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  • Tracked Shipping on All Orders
  • 14 Days Returns

Description

he RadioPopper Jr2 Transmitter is a 16 channel, 4 group radio transmitter that operates on the 902-928 MHz, ISM band and is capable of adjusting the output of the flash using a separately purchased Jr2 receiver for Nikon i-TTL or Canon E-TTL/II flash units. Triggering and power control from distances of 300 - 1,750' depending on conditions and environment is possible.

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Customer Reviews

Perfect off-camera flash system for Fuji-X series CamerasWorks great with my Fuji X-Pro2 to make a great off camera flash system with my Canon 600EX-RT flashes. I'm able to control light output quickly and easily with this transmitter along with the Jr2 Receivers. The new Jr2 system is easy to read and understand and backward compatible with my JrX receivers. I'm using this with 3 flashes during a wedding - two the dance floor and have a unit mounted on the hot shoe of my camera and this is connected via pc sync cable to trigger. Works great!5Worth the UpgradeGreat improvement over the JrX series.The controls take a bit to get used to and could be improved with updated software.Overall well worth the money and great that they're backwards compatible with the JrX receivers.4Dead on ArrivalPopper arrived promptly, but sadly it was dead. I have four Jr 2 so I know the operation. I even replaced the shipped battery with two fresh ones I had with the same results. Would not fire up.1Disappointment.I love JRx 1st gen.but JRX2 is such a disappointment.Pros: - 4 channels- Can control Alien Bees, Einstein as well as SOME(!!) Nikon and Canon flashes- Has illuminated screen and buttons- AA batteriesCons: - Quality. It is made of really cheap plastic (my copy of receiver was even badly assembled ). Buttons has a play, so if you will shake it a bit you will hear a noise of them going back and forth (although does not harm performance ) - Battery dies really fast (on the end of second shoot had to replace batteries, previous gen last me about 10-12 shoots) - Does not support old Nikon flashes like Nikon Sb 24, Sb 28 and Sb 80DX (may be more) - and Manual doesn't mention it. Probably will support most of newer flashes but with NO TTL and NO HSS - Receiver does not have cold shoe, just a screw hole for light stand (may be annoying or some who has most of umbrella stands with cold shoe) - Menu controls is badly designed. MOST ANNOYING part of menu control system is DOUBLE TAP The way it is designed: Four Buttons to choose a group (A B C D) single tap it turning group off and double tap is to choose a group to control a power output of this group. It may not sound too bad until you try to use it. Just for clarification - how often photographer on a set turning strobes ON or OF, and how often photographer on a set changing power output of strobes. So you have to double tap to do your most frequently changes, and single tap for something that you may not need to do at all. It is like while you texting you would have to double tap on a keyboard to type a letter and single tap to type a symbol or smiley face. Eventually after 3-4 years you can get to use to it, but does it worth it ??I decided to stay with previous gen.2Buyer beware - unless being embarrassed during a photo session is okay with you.These are terrible. They don't hold a battery charge - they know it's an issue that the electronics won't read correctly - misfires all the time - cheaply made - stuff rattles around in it - I am so incredibly unhappy with this purchase, I already spent less money for the new pocket wizards. I've had the radiopoppers not even a year. The last straw - the misfires happened during a newborn and senior session- VERY EMBARRASSING. I would NOT recommend these to anyone.1The Radio Popper Jr2 are like a breathe of fresh airI use the Radio Popper Jr2 to trigger my Einsteins. I had been using the Paul C Buff Cyber Commander, however, the buttons were extremely small and it's fairly complicated to use, and slow (your client will be twiddling their thumbs waiting for you). The Radio Popper Jr2 are like a breathe of fresh air, you can change your settings to each light by scrolling a wheel, it is 1/10 stop or 1/3 accurate, depending on how you want it set up. It's amazing how quickly you can adjust the lights (Einsteins, Canon, or Nikon flash/strobe) and get them exactly where you want them to be. This system can control up to 4 groups of lights! If you looking to invest in a manual trigger, I highly recommend you give the Radio Popper Jr2 a try. Also, I'm not affiliated with Radio Poppers in any way, just super impressed with their product.5It's worth it.About 2 years of service from this and it's starting to not connect. I'm not sure where the short is but I can usually take it off and put it back on and get it to work. Over all it seems a little delicate.LOVE, LOVE, LOVE the scroll wheel for fast and accurate flash adjustments.Would I buy it again? Probably. unless I find something better.3The build quality is a little light but overall they are a great buy for the moneyI have had several different brand radio triggers but these (along with the RatioPopper Jr2 Receivers) provide the additional capability to control the flash power of off camera speed lights or strobes. I have had them for about a month with no problems whatsoever. They come with connectors for 1/8 pin as well as RJ-11 for Alien Bees Strobes. The build quality is a little light but overall they are a great buy for the money.4It works as advertised delivered on time! Using it ...It works as advertised delivered on time!Using it with the JRx original receivers and prefer the digital display versus the guesstimate knobs and dip switches.5Huge Improvement Over JrX - Easy At-A-Glance Strobe Power Adjustment, At The CameraRadioPopper's Jr2 transmitter is a huge improvement over the JrX transmitter. I used to think I liked the JrX's analog knobs to adjust power, but the calibration isn't exact - you only get a relative percentage change in flash output. You also needed to paint a dot on the knobs to see where they were at a glance, and even then, it was hard to tell what power they were set to.The Jr2 eliminates all of that. You get a LCD display of exact EV power levels (if you're using Jr2 receivers). The Jr2 is backwards-compatible with JrX receivers, adjustable to % output but visible at a glance. You also get an additional flash channel for a total of four, where the JrX only gave you three. (You can use three JrX receivers with RPCubes and one Jr2 receiver to get those four channels if you'd rather not upgrade everything at once.)In practice, the Jr2's multi-button / single dial controls work very well. I don't miss separate power knobs per channel at all.** Does the Jr2 transmitter do HSS?** No, and it doesn't claim to. Read the info on RadioPopper's website before you buy. It's likely you don't really need HSS for a remote, multiple-strobe setup anyway - I never needed a remote setup to begin with, in several years of shooting professional mountain bike races.** Does the Jr2 transmitter support E-TTL / iTTL?** No, and it doesn't claim to. Again, read the info on RadioPopper's website before you buy. And again, it's likely you don't really need E-TTL / iTTL for a remote, multiple-strobe setup anyway.If you're thinking about an upgrade from a JrX transmitter, go for it.The Jr2 transmitter is well worth it.5
RadioPopper Jr 2 Transmitter

RadioPopper Jr 2 Transmitter

3.3
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.
Regular price
€222,00
Sale price
€222,00
Regular price
€366,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€144,00)