How strong is the hotshoe?

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Apr 12, 2013
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If I attach a 600ex-rt to a 6D with a 70-200 2.8 II (or any other heavy lens), is it safe to grab the body of the flash? I don't mean grabbing it once in a while, but consistently, habitually. Has anyone heard of stories of hotshoe snapping?
 
As stated, the hotshoe is strong but the base of the flash will break off. It's actually designed to do so as a planned failure point, and is a user-replaceable part (4 screws and a quick-connect plug), but save yourself the trouble and risk to the camera after breakaway, and find some other way to carry the rig. I'd recommend a Blackrapid strap or SpiderPro holster.
 
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I destroyed a flash that way, and it was only a 5d and some
Light primes, one too many times and the flash started giving me
Full dumps, and wouldn't trigger wirelessly correctly.

+1 for a Black Rapid strap .
 
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Yes, it's entirely sensible to grab your kit by the cheapest most lightly constructed part.

Clue, The body and lens are metal for a reason.

I hate to flame, but this really is a dumb question.
 
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paul13walnut5 said:
Yes, it's entirely sensible to grab your kit by the cheapest most lightly constructed part.

Clue, The body and lens are metal for a reason.

I hate to flame, but this really is a dumb question.

I don't think it's a dumb question. My 580EX flash feels really strong, I had no idea there was a designed fail-point there. I had assumed that it was strongly built, so I've grabbed my camera by the flash before, but I won't anymore. Thanks for asking this question!
 
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Grab a kit by a flash and your flash will be destroyed, and gravity be gravity, anything supported beneath the fail point will also almost likely be destroyed.

It's a dumb question.
 
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I can't testify about the 600 but back in the day when I supervised one watch of a police departments Physical Evidence Section. We broke so many Vivitar 287 hotshoes that it became standard practice to replace them with an aluminum after market shoe upon purchase (didn't want them to fail in the field). And we were only using them on Nikons with 50mm lens most of the time.
 
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neuroanatomist said:
As stated, the hotshoe is strong but the base of the flash will break off. It's actually designed to do so as a planned failure point...
I've snapped the break-point on 580EXII on two occasions. On both occasions CPS repaired the flashes in 10 minutes while I waited. Once for free.

It's sound design. I severely damaged a Nikon film body and totalled a Nikon SB-26 flash some years ago. Both items were write-offs. If there had been a break-point in the flash, the outcome may have saved the body.

-PW
 
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