Third Party Accessories - What to Buy, What to Avoid

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Vello battery grips and lens hoods work fine for me. I stick with canon flashes and so far lenses though others speak highly of sigma and tokina. Good to know about the wasabi batteries. Have also heard that eneloop batteries are good for speed lites.
 
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FatDaddyJones said:
Last week I received a battery grip for my 5D Mark III from eBay, along with two batteries, all made by DSTE from China. The battery grip feels very solid and is identical in style and function to the Canon BG-E11, having the same buttons and side loading battery tray. It also comes with the AA battery tray. Communication with the camera worked flawlessly, and it reported that a BG-E11 was connected. The camera also reported individual battery information with the grip attached.

The DSTE batteries are 2600mAh and fully decoded. You can charge them in the original Canon charger, and they show battery information in the camera.

For $72 and free shipping, I would highly recommend this grip and also the DSTE batteries for those price conscious photographers who aren't afraid to use third party accessories.

DSTE batteries are pretty good in quality. In the past 3 years, I ordered over 20 pcs of them for my different dslrs and p&s. One of them for my Canon SX40HS was dead after almost a year's normal use. I emailed them and they sent me 2 pcs replacement without questioning anything. Not all Ebay items are "bad".
 
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sama said:
DSTE batteries are pretty good in quality. In the past 3 years, I ordered over 20 pcs of them for my different dslrs and p&s. One of them for my Canon SX40HS was dead after almost a year's normal use. I emailed them and they sent me 2 pcs replacement without questioning anything. Not all Ebay items are "bad".

+1 for DSTE. Working for me for both platforms actually and as noted their service is fair.
 
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I picked up a Meike 951 speedlite. It has TTL, it'll strobe and it'll adjust the flash based on your current focal length (24 to 105mm) amongst other bells and whistles (like a laser grid AF assist beam).

Yeah, it eats batteries and it's not the same build quality of Canon's-- but so far it's been reliable and functioned as advertised. Not bad for $90 if you're not a pro and looking to save a bit of money.
 
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neuroanatomist said:
I'd also stay away from 3rd party lens hoods - not so much for the chance of a worse fit (Canon hoods are hit and miss depending on the lens) but because the Canon hoods have flocking on the inside, whereas the smooth, reflective inner surface of a 3rd party hood can actually add flare instead of reducing it.

Not true - I recently bought a EW-83J clone for my 17-40L and it has the same flocking as the original lens hoods from Canon for my 100L and 70-300L - but the Walimex still costs half the price of the Canon original and fits perfectly. Just don't get the absolutely cheapest, shiny 3rd party hoods but for example Walimex: http://www.walimex.com/nc/en/foto/produkt/402000

PS: I knew something Dr. Neuro didn't, I'll mark the day in the calendar and celebrate it annually :->
 
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My experience:
Kenko Extension Tubes...in using the 12mm tube to get closer ith my 85L (the close-focusing distance for this lens is not close), I found that my AF was way off...and if I changed the microAFadjustment it changed it for the lens alone as well as my 5D III does not recognize an extension tube (Canon or other brand) and lens as a separate entity.
I bought the Canon 12mm...no focus shift. Problem solved...wallet in pain.

I found that no-name cable releases break easily although they "look" the same as the Canon.

My Wasabi batteries and charger (includes car charger) are great! You just don't get any battery indication in the finder, if you can live with that. Savings are significant if you buy the two-battery-plus-charge set when compared to the Canon batteries, spare charger and car adapter.
 
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I have had good luck with Fotodiox lens hoods for about $5.95 each - have bought 3 of them from Amazon. They fit perfectly and can be mounted backwards. They are black on the inside and I have had no problems with flare.

I have had bad luck with a 3rd party battery (can't remember name) - the supplied charger worked fine with Canon batteries (which is why I ordered - needed the replacement charger and the battery came along with it). The battery would not insert all the way into the camera - and certainly wasn't going to force it in, so put it in recycle.

Tony M
 
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I got in on trying ebay stuff as well. From the top of my head, the most pleasant price/performance I got were:

1, remote flash triggers (MK-RC7 i think), cost something like 15euro, work great as flash radio triggers, but also work as wireless shutter release : ) and then

2, a flash branded Godox TT520 for something like 26euros that I sometimes prefer to my (almost 10times as expensive) canon 430exii... it doesn't have some functions, but it can work as optical slave, it can be set as front and rear curtain, but mostly, in manual its so much quicker to change the power level... on a 430exii you need to hold the middle button for a moment, then go +/-, then push the middle one again, on the Godox, you just press + or - and you are done, so when I'm playing with some off camera setup, I find it more convenient. Oh and as a detail, the cheap one has a white reflection card, while the canon doesn't. And, I actually bought that from linkdelight.com, but they sell on ebay as well.

some other stuff that works great: quick draw shoulder strap with soft foam-ish shoulder padding, foldable 5in1 110cm reflector and stofen diffuser, simple extension tubes (intro into macro for a few bucks), some cleaning stuff
mixed feelings: gorillapod tripod (works great, but the screw rotates and can not be held easily from bottom, so I need to use a coin or something), battery grip (again, works great, fits well, but smelled badly when it came and it still does a bit some two weeks later), I also bought a ND8 filter that I wasn't expecting to be top quality, but I wanted to try it, get some experience and see if I have a use for it (or a different density) before I invest in an expensive one and it served like that (but has a strong red-ish color cast)

... but all for a fraction of the price of locally offered alternatives
 
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I can't speak enough praise for Manfrotto light stands. I had a bunch of cheap $15-20 stands that I would replace once per month. Had the same Manfrotto stands for almost a year now and they are still tough as nails.

Think Tank bags and belts/harnesses are top notch. Would be lugging a backpack still without them and missing a lot of shots.

RRS anything. No regrets on any of my RSS items other then a few body plates I don't use anymore. Buy an L-plate first and save the cost of not having it when you need it. Wish I would have done that for all my bodies.

Colorspace UDMA 2 http://www.hypershop.com/HyperDrive-COLORSPACE-UDMA2-p/hdu2-000.htm. Fill a card.. dump to this. No lost photos. I bought the bare device and a 1tb 7200 RPM drive and saved a few bucks. Super durable and goes almost everywhere with me.

For flashes, Sto-Fen diffuser domes. Easy to use, produce wonderful light and one of my favorite light modifiers by far (other then my Lastolite box!). Can use with Gels and all sorts of modifiers.

Avoid large CF cards. When they go bad it can be catastrophic and you can loose a whole day + of shooting. I use SanDisk and Transcend cards and have only lost one in 10 years of shooting. I stick to 8-16GB max and 600X+. The QC seems better in that range.

Stay away from 3rd party grips in all honesty. I had one on my 30D and it caused untold problems. Some people swear by them but I feel they are cheap. I don't mind the premium knowing the Canon brand ones are to their spec's and have yet to have one fail on me in 4 cameras.

I would avoid amazon lens pens at all costs. Be wary of used flash units unless you have a good relation with the person or the price is so cheap it does not matter.



Not really accessories but books are huge. I always have one book or another about photography I am reading. ATM reading about and learning bird species in my area since I want to try my hand at birding. I just finished re-reading Syl Arena's Speedliter's Handbook to brush up on my flash work. These are by far the best assets I own as they grow my personal ability. I honestly have not read a bad photography book yet, but It will happen (by bad I mean a book that did not teach me something or give me an alternative insight).

I use all of these things (or have) on a daily basis.
 
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Over they years I've used countless third party accessories such as Speedlites (from Metz, Sigma, Yongnuo), few Radio Triggers (from Yongnuo), Battery Grips (for 7D & 450D), Batteries (from Pearstone and 1 more company I forgot the name), lens hoods, Vello Tripod Collar (for Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 L IS) etc. Every single one of them (with the exception of Vello Tripod Collar) failed me during a photo shoot ... the Metz plastic shoe broke with a simple 1 foot drop, Sigmas just gave up the ghost one day, Yongunos did not fire wireless during a very critical photo shoot of some VIP's, both Battery grips failed after 1 year, batteries had very poor life span, lens hoods split ... but the Vello Tripod Collar is going great guns. I now try to stick to only Canon products as I've come to trust their finish and the R&D that goes into some very minor details that make a difference to the end result.
 
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Marsu42 said:
Rienzphotoz said:
Battery grips failed after 1 year

What exactly was the problem with the grips?

I am going to get a Meike grip for the 6d because the price difference to the Canon original is immense - the only problems I read about is that some 3rd party grips loose contact when bend a lot, though the 6d version is reported to be rather sturdy.

Every 3rd party grip I have used has either stopped working (bad contacts/crummy wiring) or caused errors. I would rather pay a premium knowing the item was built to canon spec's then built sub par.
 
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Marsu42 said:
Rienzphotoz said:
Battery grips failed after 1 year

What exactly was the problem with the grips?

I am going to get a Meike grip for the 6d because the price difference to the Canon original is immense - the only problems I read about is that some 3rd party grips loose contact when bend a lot, though the 6d version is reported to be rather sturdy.
The 3rd party battery grip I bought for 7D just stopped working one fine day, without any reason ... everything seemed fine, no scratches or falls, just died ... tried everything I could t make it work, including cleaning the contacts ... but no use.
The 3rd party grip on 450D did not work after its plastic latch (to close the door) broke during routine change of batteries.
I forgot about a macro ring light (Bower I think) which also gave up the ghost after just 4 months of very light macro work.
I also forgot about B+W UV & CP filers ... this is one brand I prefer over Canon ... B+W produce top notch UV & CP filters ... all my lenses have B+W filters.
 
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One more thing I forgot to mention is that with almost all the third party accessories is that I got at least one error message on the camera after I updated the camera firmware to a new version.
 
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RMC33 said:
Every 3rd party grip I have used has either stopped working (bad contacts/crummy wiring) or caused errors. I would rather pay a premium knowing the item was built to canon spec's then built sub par.

Oh well, in this case you probably get what you paid for - though there seem to be differences between the absolutely cheapest grips and the a little more expensive Meike models. For pro shooting I guess it's no question what to get, but the Canon "premium" in these cases is stiff: You can get five (5) Meike grips for one (1) Canon...
 
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