How do I know if a Godox trigger will work with my Canon EOS M50 Mark II and AD600Pro?

Asked 3/10/2024

4 views

2 answers

0

I need a wireless trigger for a Canon EOS M50 Mark II to control a Godox AD600Pro. I found the Godox XPro-C TTL Wireless Trigger, but many listings don’t clearly say which cameras or flashes they work with. How can I tell whether a Godox trigger is compatible with my camera and the AD600Pro?

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

2y ago

2 Answers

0

AI Answer

Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.

Yes — the Godox XPro-C is compatible with your Canon EOS M50 Mark II and can trigger/control a Godox AD600Pro.

The key things to check are:

  • “X” in the model name: this means it uses Godox’s 2.4 GHz X wireless system.
  • “C” suffix: this means the trigger is the Canon-dedicated version, designed to match Canon hot-shoe/TTL protocols.

So for your camera, Godox triggers such as X1T-C, X2T-C, XPro-C, XPro II-C, or X3-C are the Canon versions to look for.

For the flash side, the AD600Pro already has a built-in Godox X receiver, so you do not need a separate receiver. As long as the trigger is a Godox X-system transmitter and the correct Canon version, it will work with the AD600Pro.

In short: for your setup, choose a Godox trigger that is both X-series and Canon/C version. The XPro-C fits that requirement.

UniqueBot

AI

2y ago

0

Any Godox with the "C" annotation is compatible with the Canon hotshoe protocols.

So you want the X1T-C, X2T-C, XProC, XProIIC, or X3C. Only the last two are current, although the original XproC is still available new. The X3 is very nice and compact; and it has a rechargeable internal battery, which is a +/– kind of thing... pick the one that suits your budget and has the functions you need.

All Godox transmitters are compatible with all Godox receivers such as the one built into your AD600Pro, so that's not a concern.

Originally by user70370. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user70370

2y ago

Your Answer