Alien Bees vs. Cactus V2 trigger & receivers

You may remember the crazybooth project I wrote about last month. While at that photo shoot, I learned a very valuable lesson; You get what you pay for. I know what you are saying, that’s not exactly a new lesson. True as that may be, when it comes to wireless flash triggers, I had no idea how apparent it would be.

During the crazybooth shoot, I’d say we had an optimal shooting setup to allow the Cactus V2 remote trigger & receivers to work perfectly. The trigger and receivers were no more than 7 feet away from each other and they were in direct line-of-sight. Unfortunately, we learned quickly that they were going to fire the flash roughly 1 out of every 3 or 4 times we clicked a shot. If we were doing product photography with a stationary, unchanging item, this wouldn’t have been a big deal. But, in a crazybooth setting, missing a shot with real emotion, a funny face, a great smile, etc… well, it can ruin your whole shoot.

After the crazybooth incident, I went out and purchased a set of Alien Bees triggers (1) & receivers (2). When they first arrived we did a very non-scientific test to test their range. I sat in one office with the receiver while a friend walked around snapping photos around the other offices, even going inside and shutting the doors. No matter what elements we threw at it, they performed more than 95% of the time. This brought up it’s own questions, though. Exactly how far away can you be from the remote and still have it flash? I had to find out for myself.

This evening I grabbed a tripod, flash and umbrella and set them up on the sidewalk in front of my house. I then grabbed a tape measure and some chalk. I started off by making 13 chalk marks, 10 feet apart, starting 10 feet away from the flash. I then put on the Cactus V2 trigger and receiver and started snapping.

I’m using a prime 20mm lens at f/4.0 with a 1/60 shutter speed.

The first 5 shots (50 feet away on the last one) worked fine, as I expected they would. At 60 feet away, my first shot showed a dark umbrella. I thought it didn’t fire. I then held the camera away from my eye and fired the trigger. I saw the flash go off, but chimping showed a dark umbrella again. A few more tests and at 1/60, I was not able to get the flash to sync with the trigger. However, it was still firing. I moved back to 70 and 80 feet and it took 3 tries at each location to get a flash. At 90 feet, I was officially out of range.

Next came the Alien Bees. The first 5 shots were fine, as expected. When I moved to shot 6 (60 feet), I was curious to see if I was going to run in to the syncing issue I had with the Cactus V2s. As I had hoped, there was no sync issue. I made may with rough the next few shots until I was standing on #13, 130 feet away. The flash went off as expected and still, no sync issues. Back, back, back I went. 150, 180, 200, 240, 260, 280 feet away. Every shot was perfect. No sync issue and the flash fired on the first try time and time again. At 290 feet was the first miss-fire. It took 3 shots for the flash to go off. Still I moved back. In my final shot, I was 325 feet away from the flash. It fired on the first try and still had no sync issues. I could have tried moving back further, but I would have been trespassing on a neighbor’s lawn.

To sum up, as far as I can tell, the Alien Bees are completely worth the investment. Each shot taken within a “normal” distance fired the flash every time. I didn’t have a miss-fire until I was almost 300 feet away. The fact that I don’t have a lens that would make shooting from 300 feet away all that useful anyway leads me to believe this isn’t going to be a problem I’m going to run in to any time soon.

Here are a couple shots to give you an idea of the Alien Bee’s range.

Related posts:

  1. Fun with White Balance
  2. Building a Crazybooth
  3. Review: Lomo ColorSplash 35mm Camera
  4. Review: Fisheye Lomography Camera
  5. What is Lomography?

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7 Responses to “Alien Bees vs. Cactus V2 trigger & receivers”

  1. I think the appropriate comment here is : SCIENCE IT WORKS, BITCHES

  2. Has read with the pleasure, very interesting post, write still, good luck to you!

  3. hahah awesome review! and that's good cuz today I bought on the alien bees website the busy bee package and I was considering to buy the cybersync. 300 ft's away, it's probable a useless range but it proves that the cybersync it's pretty reliable. great review a thanks for the info!

  4. Wireless flash triggers? Can you please explain to me the meaning of this? Thanks!

  5. Sure. Rather than have your flash on your camera, for example, I may want the flash to come from a 45 degree angle. to accomplish this I have my flash on a stand. There are two ways to make that flash fire when I push the trigger. One is by connecting it with a cable. The other way is by using a transmitter and a receiver. The transmitter is attached to your camera and when you click the shutter it triggers the receiver and the flash goes pop!

    Hope that helps!

  6. Yes, 300 feet away is a bit much. But, hey, at least you know it can be done if needed!

    Thanks for the kind words. Glad you enjoyed my review.

  7. Thanks for the thorough post – I am wondering in cases where i may be closer than 10 feet do you any problems with the receiver tripping because it's too close? I know with a few of my Cactus v2's I have that problem and some I don't. I'm looking to switch to these especially since i sometimes use a ring light mounted on a tripod and move around it depending on the shoot.