Compatibility with Nikon D750
Hello all,
Today I received a pair of Cactus V6 II, being very happy with that.
After two hours of testing on a D750 I didn't managed to make them fire the flash, in any combination (TTL on camera or out of the camera). I tested them on a D610 and everything was ok, then I tested them again with the D750 and nothing.
The conclusion, they don't make a good contact with the hot-shoe of the camera (it works only if I push slowly on the Transceiver, on the front side - near the lens). After realising that, I searched on the internet and I got here, seeing that the same problem was with the V6 I.
Anyone has this issue with the V6 II? Is there any chance, if I change them, to receive a pair who may work with D750?
Thanks!
Comments
https://www.facebook.com/Cactus.Image/posts/1239374886073347
x-post from Facebook:
Recently a few Nikon D750 users inquired about #hotshoe connection issues with the #CactusV6ii. It is a problem with this particular Nikon camera as studied by Fstoppers.
https://fstoppers.com/originals/stop-fighting-hot-shoe-your-nikon-d750-110295
Recently a few #Nikon #D750 users inquired about #hotshoe connection issues with the #CactusV6ii. It is a problem with this particular Nikon camera as studied by Fstoppers.
https://fstoppers.com/originals/stop-fighting-hot-shoe-your-nikon-d750-110295
On the original V6, this D750's problem only affects you when you mount a Nikon flash with TTL Pass Through on the V6. But on the new V6 II, because it runs on digital TTL protocol (V6 is analogue only), connection with the camera on all hot shoe contact pins is required at all time.
To fix the gap on the "slightly different" Nikon hot shoe, you may put one or two layers of masking tape at the front of the hot shoe to offset the distance so all the contact pins are correctly aligned.
FYI, in early 2015 we modifiied V6's bottom hot shoe to have a better fit with the D750 but it is still not 100%.
http://www.cactus-image.com/community/discussion/comment/588/#Comment_588
We have kept the same bottom hot shoe on both V6 and V6 II, but there seems to be a slight deviation across different copies of the camera. So the masking-tape-trick would be your best bet to keep a consistent hot shoe connection between the camera and the flash device.
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Here's a sample DIY masking tape job. You may also use a small piece
of thin cardboard and tape it with masking tape.. Or apply 2-3 layers
of masking tape as needed.
Hope this helps!
Brand Manager
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Thanks for working with me through this and answering all of my questions. I'm very relieved to be able to keep my V6 II. Like I said earlier, there isn't anything else on the market that has the same features in one small unit and the same quality.
Brand Manager
It's the SB-900 that is the problem. It's an old flash, so it's probably not worth it to send it in for service. It works perfect on camera, so that's what we will use it for and I will get two more RF60X to use on our softboxes.
Brand Manager
My solution was to start inserting the Cactus, partially tighten it, then to slide it in some more. There is an audible "click" when the pin on the Cactus foot drops into the receptacle on the D750. Finish tightening the Cactus to the hot shoe, and voilà! problem solved.
If you look at the bottom of your Cactus, and turn the tightening lever, you will see the pin I am talking about. You don't need to partially tighten it until the pin and receptacle are close to aligning.
I hope this helps. I save me adding spacers, and tape and all other manner of horrors to my D750 body.
Cheers!
Senior Product Specialist
Cactus®
Harvest One Limited