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Accessory Roundup: CES edition!
DPReview NewsImages: LG, Prograde, Nanlite, ThinkTank |
It's a new year, and we're back with our weekly accessory roundup after taking a bit of a break over the holiday season. It's just in time, too – this week was CES, the Consumer Electronics Show, where many manufacturers show off their latest and greatest tech.
Before we take a look at the accessories unveiled this week, let's see what's on sale.
Sales of the Week
Photo: Dale Baskin |
Canon's EOS R6 II, a full frame camera aimed at enthusiasts, thoroughly impressed us when we reviewed it last year. These days its competition is a little stronger following the release of the Nikon Z6III, but it gets a leg up by currently being on sale. You can pick one up for $1,999, around $500 off its MSRP.
Buy at Amazon Buy at B&H Buy at AdoramaPhoto: Richard Butler |
If you need (or just want) more resolution and performance than the EOS R6 II offers, the excellent Nikon Z8 is also on sale for $300 off its MSRP.
Some small flashes
Image: Godox |
Godox's latest products technically came out before CES, but we didn't get to highlight them due to the holidays, so we're doing it now. The company has released three small, on-camera flashes: the iM20 / iM22 – essentially the same flash in different profiles – and the iA32.
The iM20-series are small manual on-camera flashes that Godox says will work with "a wide range of hot-shoe cameras" via its single contact. They feature five brightness levels and a built-in battery that the company says will get you 440 full-power flashes with a 3-second recycle time.
$34 on Amazon $34 on B&HImage: Godox |
The iA32 is a bit beefier, though it still uses a single hot-shoe contact for syncing. You can adjust the angle of the flash tube from 90° to -7° via a dial on the side, letting you bounce it off the ceiling or point it directly at your subject. It has eight manually selectable power levels but also features an "auto" mode that lets you input your ISO and aperture and let the flash recommend a shooting distance. It uses two AA or LR6 batteries for power, and Godox quotes 490 flashes with a 2.5-second recycle time.
$50 on Amazon $50 on AmazonImage: Godox |
If you're more of a phone photographer, Godox has also announced the MA5R, a magnetic wireless power bank that doubles as an RGB light panel. It has an 18.13Wh battery, which you can either use to top up your phone or to power the 5W array of LEDs if you happen to be taking a video of something. It also has a small selfie light under a screen that displays settings and battery life information, if you don't need the full panel's power.
$49 on Amazon $49 on B&HA Thunderbolt Hub with room to grow
The ProGrade PG20 adds three Thunderbolt 4 ports, a USB A port, and can charge your computer. Image: ProGrade |
ProGrade's new PG20 Thunderbolt 4 hub puts an interesting spin on the idea of a card reader dock. On its own, it splits a single Thunderbolt connection into three and adds a single 10Gbps USB A port. It can provide the computer you connect it to with 85W of power, which should be enough to charge all but the beefiest of laptops.
It also gives you a place to put two sold separately ProGrade card readers. Image: ProGrade |
Its top, however, is magnetic and looks like it has a tray cut out of it. That's because it's designed for you to put up to two ProGrade card readers on top of it, turning it into a combo hub / photo and video offloading station. Unlike card reader docks with slots that you slide modules into, connecting two card readers to the ProGrade will require taking up two of your three Thunderbolt ports. However, at $170 for the hub itself, it is a substantially cheaper option than those currently made by Sandisk or Lexar, though those options are far more expandable.
$170 at B&H $170 at ProGradeFlying camera bags
Images: ThinkTank |
Camera bag maker ThinkTank has updated two of its air travel-focused bags. The company says the Airport Navigator V2 and the Airport Roller Derby V2 are both designed to be easily maneuverable, thanks to their eight wheels that can turn and roll in pretty much any direction.
The Navigator is a smaller bag that ThinkTank says can hold two gripped bodies with lenses, along with a few primes and flashes. The Roller Derby, meanwhile, is a bit bigger – it can even fit a 400mm F2.8, provided it's not mounted to a camera. The bags also have the usual suite of photographer-focused features: an included raincover, tripod attachment points, and a security cable and lock.
Airport Roller Derby V2
$430 at B&H $430 at ThinkTankAirport Navigator V2
$350 at B&H $350 at ThinkTankA plinth for the Mac Mini
Image: Satechi |
Satechi has made a combination stand and dock for the new M4-powered Mac Mini, expanding the computer's I/O options, and making it easier to use. While the diminutive desktop has enough processing power for all but the most demanding photographers, it lacks a few features. The dock's most notable addition is a UHS-II SD card reader, which lets you easily offload your memory cards.
It also includes three USB-A ports – two that run at 10 Gbps second and one that runs at much slower USB 2.0 speeds – and has a cutout to make pressing the Mac Mini's bottom-mounted power button easier.
You can also install an M.2 SSD in the base, giving you access to more storage that's more or less permanently attached to your computer. That could be a powerful selling point for the budget-oriented. While the base model Mac Mini includes a fair amount of RAM, it only comes with 256GB of storage, and Apple charges a king's ransom for upgrades – bumping the Mac Mini's internal SSD up to 2TB costs $800 while you can easily get a top-of-the-line 2TB SSD to install in the dock for around $150 – though do note that Satechi says you'll only be able to read and write to it at up to 10Gbps, so it won't have anywhere near the same performance as the computer's internal storage.
The stand is due out next month and will cost $99.
Compact softboxes
The Rapid 90 and Rapid 120 softboxes can fold down into a very compact package. Image: Nanlite |
Lightning company Nanlite's new softboxes have a neat trick: they fold up flat, making them relatively easy to store and transport compared to more traditional designs. There are two sizes: the Rapid 90, which has an 89cm (35") diameter and the Rapid 120, with a 120cm (47.2") diameter.
Once unfolded, it's a standard parabolic softbox. Image: Nanlite |
After you expand the Rapid softbox, which Nanlite says you can do "in just a few seconds," it pretty much acts as a normal softbox. It comes with an egg-crate grid and one standard and one "lite" diffusion layer for modifying whatever light you attach via its Bowens mount.
Rapid 90
$179 at B&H $179 at NanliteRapid 120
$199 at B&H $199 at NanliteA long tether
Image: OWC |
Ultra-fast standards like Thunderbolt and USB 4 are great when you need to move a lot of data around quickly – something becoming increasingly important in the age of high-megapixel cameras and >4K video – but they do come with a notable downside: the cables are generally quite short. If you want to move data at 40Gbps over more than a meter or two, you're going to need something exotic; the $159 price tag of Apple's 3m Thunderbolt 4 "Pro Cable" seems ridiculous at first glance until you realize it's one of the only options on the market that long.
That capability is getting less expensive, though. At CES, Other World Computing announced its active optical cables, which can carry data at Thunderbolt / USB 4 speeds, along with power, over very impressive distances. The 3m version, which costs $98, is capable of carrying up to 240W of power, and while the 4.5m version can only do 60W, it manages to be longer and cheaper than Apple's top-end cable, coming in at $129.
While that's still undoubtedly a lot of money for a cable, if you need to move a lot of data a long way, there's not much else out there that can match this performance for this price.
Buy at Amazon Buy at OWCAnother iPhone shutter button
Image: Belkin |
A few years ago, Apple built a battery case for the iPhone 11 that had an integrated camera button. Not only did the case let you keep your phone running for longer, but it also gave you a physical control for launching and controlling the camera. Unfortunately, the company didn't revisit the concept when it launched the iPhone 12, and instead started building camera controls into the phones themselves.
This year, though, Belkin has taken that concept even further. The Stage PowerGrip attaches to your phone via MagSafe, and can keep it charged with its 10,000 mAh battery. It's shaped to add a substantial amount of grip to your phone and has a button that looks perfectly placed to act as a shutter release, though Belkin's press release doesn't actually mention what it's for.
Image: Belkin |
The Stage PowerGrip has an integrated USB-C cable, a USB-C port, and an LED screen for displaying how much battery it has left. It's price is yet to be determined, but the company says it should come out in May. It'll be available in five colors: "powder blue," "sandbox," "fresh yellow," "pepper" and "lavender."
A 6K display
Image: LG |
If you're in the market for a 6K 32-inch display, you'll be getting another option soon. LG has announced the UltraFine 6K 32U990A monitor, which connects to your computer via Thunderbolt 5. Details – including price and when it'll be available – are scarce at this point, but LG promises that it'll deliver "exceptional color accuracy" for "media professionals."
It's not the first display with this size and resolution. Perhaps the most notable is Apple's Pro Display XDR, which sports very impressive brightness levels that come with a whopping $5,000 price tag, not including a stand. For people willing to sacrifice brightness for savings, there's the $2,500 Dell U3224KB, which appears to use a similar panel to the LG UltraFine. However, it's housed in a somewhat strange-looking case with a very large top bezel to accommodate an integrated webcam. The LG monitor, meanwhile, has a design that appears... let's call it 'heavily inspired' by Apple monitors.