Saturday, August 9, 2008
Vivitar 285HV is a Piece of Junk
You read the title correctly. The Vivitar 285HV flash is garbage. Why? It does not fire reliably. There were only two methods that "worked": connecting the flash to the hot shoe of a camera or pressing the test button. The first method goes against the idea of using off-camera flash. The second method isn't a valid way to fire a flash!
I tested the 285HV in every possible way that I could think of. I used the dinky 2" proprietary sync jack-to-PC sync cable that shipped with the flash. I bought the longer version of the cable from FlashZebra. I even cut off the proprietary jack, stripped the two wires inside and soldered it directly to the flash. I connected a hot shoe adaptor to the flash and then ran a cable to my AlienBees remotes and still it wouldn't fire.
When I decided to dissect and modify the flash and cable, I felt optimistic that I could make the flash work properly, so I took a series of photos to document my progress. I wanted this post to be a nifty how-to guide, but alas my modification didn't work. Instead I am posting the pictures to go along with my rants. Here's a step-by-step account of what I did. Please excuse the uneven lighting...I didn't have working flash for god's sake! I also refused to use the built-in flash on my camera. :-)
285HV and crappy proprietary jack:
Exposed the wiring adjacent to the proprietary jack:
With a Dremel tool, I drilled a hole for the cable to exit the hot shoe assembly (it's the bottom one with the plastic flecks around the edges):
The hot shoe assembly plus cable:
The hot shoe assembly plus cable soldered together:
All done:
R.I.P. proprietary jack:
If you're planning on making your own mods to the 285HV, don't use my pictures as a guide, use the ones by Neil Creek and Nathan Kerr instead.
I am very upset, because I wanted to learn off-camera flash techniques without spending too much money. I therefore eschewed the expensive SB-600 and SB-800. The 285HV received great reviews from Strobist and Popular Photography. I drank the Kool-Aid and got burned.
So have I given up on off-camera flash? Nope, I ended up buying the original flash I wanted: the SB-800. I've had it for a day, and it's been great. I will post up my first test photos shortly.
Let me assure you that this post is not an SB-800 puff piece. I truly wanted the Vivitar 285HV to work, because my plan was to buy four of them for the price of one SB-800. It would have been a marvelous setup. Instead, the 285HV ended up costing me over $150 for the flash, the cable from FlashZebra, and the soldering equipment (solder iron + holder, solder, flux, tin, and wire stripper). If Vivitar continues to sell such shoddy equipment, they should get out of the photography business completely.
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1 comment:
I think you'll be much happier with the SB-800. In truth I tend to advise people to get name brand stuff made by your camera manufacturor. I know it's an expensive hobby, but sometimes you can waste more than you save in terms of both dollars and time.
Damien Franco
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