I'm hoping someone here can help me. I just recently bought a X-T2 (lovin it!) but i would like to have a better flash. I currently have a canon speedlite 430ex ii and I was wondering if it is possible to trigger this as a slave with the commander mode and the pocket flash that came with the camera?

Julie, forget it. No TTL w Canon flashes. I still keep my Canon gear in order to use my 6 Canon radio controlled TTL off camera Speedlites. If you attach the Canon speedlite to the Fuji, it will be pure manual dumb flash.


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You can, but there have been reports of camera overheating and rapid battery drain due to the incompatibilities of the data pins (the ones not in the center). Besides, since the 430EX II doesn't have a manual mode, you won't be able to control the power of the flash.

There are some inexpensive Fuji-compatible flashes, and some amazingly inexpensive manual flashes available -- the Chinese have been particularly busy in that market. Some brands I hear mentioned regularly are Godox, Nissin, Neewer, Metz, and Yongnuo. Amazon has rebranded the Godox VT-520 as the Amazon Basics flash (manual only) for $28 in the US.

I have NOT tried the flash for extended use, so if people say it's bad for the body, well.... I'd research it. I have a cheap radio trigger which does the trick at triggering TWO 430 EX II flashes fine.

No. It won't work. Commander mode isn't the same as master flash mode on Canon dSLRs. Commander mode is basically putting the pop-up flash into M mode (vs. TTL) so that you can use it with a "dumb" optical slave (a see-burst-fire-flash sensor. On most 3rd party flashes, this is typically called S1 mode; in Nikon terminology, it's SU-4 mode).

I have a 580EXII and an X100T, and I can use my old Yongnuo YN-622C triggers to fire and set the power remotely on my 580EXII, but there's no TTL/HSS or access to custom functions like I can get with it on a Canon body. I wouldn't recommend going this route.

If you plan on keeping your Canon gear, a Godox TT685C can be used like a 580EXII for most things, and can be used off-camera in TTL and HSS with both Canon and Fuji X with the appropriate X1T transmitters, so long as the TT685C's firmware is upgraded to at least v3.2.

It won't fry the camera. Most digital-era TTL speedlights have sync voltages below 10V, if not below 5V. The lowest voltage rating I've heard on Fuji X cameras (and that was X100-series) was 50V; I've also heard 250V. You mostly only have to worry about pre-'80s vintage flashes. Canon's EX speedlights are in the below-6V region; Nikon SB flashes are typically 4V.

But. It's likely to be a bit too big/heavy for mirrorless, and you'll have to put it in M mode and dial in the power setting you want on the flash itself. The flash and the camera can't really "talk" to each other.

If you had a 580EXII, it might be more worth it, because you could put the 580EXII into Ext.M mode (autothyristor mode) and still have some way of automating the flash power output. But the 430EXII doesn't have the external sensor modes. A Nikon SB-800/900/910 also has an non-TTL Auto mode that does the same thing.

Godox is the least expensive and has the most expansion capabilities, but doesn't work great with legacy gear. It's probably best if you're building a system from the ground up. It does over cross-platform support, so you could use the same flashes with the Canon and Fuji cameras, and just need different transmitters.

Cactus V6II is best for legacy TTL flash support. They're the best bet if you don't want to rebuy any flashes or shoot Pentax. The triggers are mostly add-on to existing TTL flashes. Cross-platform is also offered.

Nissin Air has the most powerful small TTL flashes for on-camera use: the i40 and i60a. The "a" designation means that radio triggers are built-in. There is no cross-platform support. If you want to use your Canons with the Fuji, then you'd need separate flashes and triggers in each system.

I just came across this thread and was wondering if you can help clarify something. When you say you are hanging on to your flash triggers, are you saying that TTL will work with Canon flashes and Fuji Cameras if used off camera with a trigger? I have a fuji ex3 on the way and it would be awesome if I can use my Canon flash. I know I'm replying to a year old comment you made, but I will really appreciate your response. Thanks in advance.

... When you say you are hanging on to your flash triggers, are you saying that TTL will work with Canon flashes and Fuji Cameras if used off camera with a trigger? I have a fuji ex3 on the way and it would be awesome if I can use my Canon flash.

If your Canon flash is a Godox TT685-C ($110) or V860II-C ($180), then yes. I use my TT685-C in TTL/HSS with my Xpro-C on my 5DMkII, my XPro-F on my Fuji X100T, and my XPro-O on my Panasonic GX7. The Godox speedlights can do cross-brand TTL.

Whatever attaches to the camera hotshoe (transmitter of flash) has to has to "match" the system of the camera, but off-camera lights can switch between all the brands Godox supports (Canon, Nikon, Sony, Fuji, MFT; with Pentax support being added).

If your Canon flash is a Canon EX speedlite, then no. You can use it in TTL from a Godox X1T-C or XPro-C transmitter on a Canon camera if you attach an X1R-C receiver to its foot, but it won't do TTL from an X1T-F or XPro-F on a Fuji camera; I think you only can fire it and control its M power level.

As far as I know canon flashes will not work with TTL, at least TTL does not work with my flashq. If you need TTL dump your canons. If you can get by with manual i can really recommend flashq. I use flash so rarely that i can't justify spending money on more flash equipment (i would loose most of the value of my canon flash in addition to the money i would have to spend on a new system).

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This is an OpenOCD issue, not a problem with your code. I got this issue when the debugger command file was referring to a "stlink-v2-1" but what I actually have is an "stlink-v2". I'm using the STM32F0 Discovery board.

The LED flash next to the camera lens on the back of your iPhone or iPad can blink when your device is locked and you receive a notification. This can be useful for anyone who might miss audible alerts.

Maybe create a new "empty" (not relying on CubeMX) project in CubeIDE and a corresponding new debug configuration. This would give you a project with a minimal set of resources as a starting ground to just see if flash/debug with CubeIDE now works.

Is it exactly the same error message with the Bluepill? Reason for asking is that some Bluepill boards embeds fake/cloned STM32 MCUs. the ST-Link firmware and CubeIDE will block these from being used. But that should spawn another error message. CubeProg should also not allow this use case.

I am testing three different Blue Pills and a Nucleo-64. I am new and have been getting inconsistent results. I started with CubeIDE 1.3.(something) and it has now upgraded to 1.4.1. Right now I don't see any differances between the two versions concerning flashing.

First I was trying to use the Nucleo-64's STLink and it will not power up the target. I guess that question will be for another thread. I was able to flash one of the Blue Pills using the serial (Boot0) and the CubeIDE did upgrade the STLink software. So that leaves me with two target boards.

One note though, There is a difference between the firmware rev with the CubeProgrammer and CubeIDE applications, so moving between the two means the firmware has to be changed. The firmware rev from CubeIDE 1.4.1 is not compatible with CubeProgrammer v2.4.0.

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