Fstoppers Reviews the Phottix Mitros TTL Speed Light

Fstoppers Reviews the Phottix Mitros TTL Speed Light

The Phottix Mitros TTL Flash was announced in early 2012 but saw another full year of development before it was finally officially released in March of 2013. That kind of time spent building a product really resonates with me, and I was expecting a finished product that was going to stand up to the rigors of daily use. I was not disappointed.

Phottix has a tough task ahead of them. Being a relatively new player in the market as a third party brand, they will have a hard time building up the kind of widespread acceptance its competitors have. In order to grow and make that next big jump into success, they absolutely must release quality innovative products. While the Mitros might not offer anything truly new to the speedlight industry, without a doubt it is a quality product that performs nearly as well as the industry leaders.

When you first pick up the Mitros, you immediately are reassured by how solid it feels. A few years ago when I watched speedlight attempts by third party brands come into the market, their main issue was just being flimsy and unable to withstand real-world use over an extended period of time. Sure, they were cheap as all get-out, but they didn’t last nearly as long as a more expensive model from Canon. You get what you pay for, as the saying goes. But as the years have gone by, brands like Phottix have really been pushing to produce higher quality products, realizing that was the only way they were going to carve out sales against the fully entrenched market leaders. I like to believe that is why the Mitros took so long to develop and then finally release. Phottix knew if they released a vastly inferior product, they weren’t going to sell them.

mitros back

The flash head has a 180 degree rotation and a 97 degree tilt. That basically means you won’t have to worry about positioning the head; it will point where you need it in pretty much any situation. The Mitros has a flash coverage of 24-105mm using auto or manual zoom, functionality that has pretty much become standard these days. Some other basic but important information:

  • Channels: 4
  • Wireless options: OFF, Master, Slave and Optical Slave
  • Transmission range (Approx.): ( Indoors:12-16m/39.36-52.48 ft., Outdoors: 7-9m/22.96-29.52 ft., Reception angle:±40°(horizontal),±30°(vertical)
  • Controlled slave groups: 3 (A, B, and C)
  • Flash ratio control: 1:8-1:1-8:1
  • Standby current: ≤100uA in sleep mode
  • Dimensions: (L x W x H): 202.8×77.5×58.3 mm
  • Weight: 427g (flash only, excluding batteries)

 

The Mitros has a guide number of 58/190 (at 105mm focal length, ISO 100 in meters/feet), which is the same as the Canon 580EX II.

mitros front

I normally like to avoid comparisons in reviews, but I’ll make an exception here because it’s important to see how it stacks up to the industry leader, being priced much lower than the Canon equivalent. The Mitros was just a hair slower on the recycle rate at the higher power settings. By that, I mean about half a second. Down at the lower quick flash settings, the recycle rate was identical. It also seems to very effectively dissipate heat, never struggling to keep up with continual flashes at maximum power (neither did the Canon flash, but that is certainly expected). I did not test the Mitros with any sort of external power source (as it is compatible with a Phottix Battery Pack and Canon compact battery pack CP-E4 through an adapter), so I would be cautious if you plan to use a battery pack as even though it seems to handle heat dissipation well, everything has its limit. Battery consumption was about even with the Canon 580EX II as well.

The Mitros operates pretty much how you would expect. It has a ton of functions and you will have to play with it for a while to get comfortable with operating it. Once you get a handle of how to access all the functions, it’s a breeze.

I’m traditionally a “Manual Mode” shooter, having learned from a strictly manual standpoint. If you want to use this flash for TTL shooting (which honestly would be the only reason to buy a TTL flash like the Mitros), it works absolutely flawlessly with the Phottix Odin trigger system. If you set up groups of these flashes in a studio, you can operate them all from the one master trigger system. You can pair, group and change settings all from one place and operated on one LCD screen. What’s more, it’s extremely easy. My issue with some TTL trigger and speedlight combinations is that it’s hard to tell exactly what you’re doing. With the Odin and Mitros combination, you get a screen that shows all the groups and the power settings for each. Extremely useful if you don’t have an assistant or don’t want to be pacing around your setup trying to get everything where you want it. This is a massive time saver.

The Mitros also supports High Speed Sync, which is something I know many of you desire in your speedlights (and studio strobes for that matter). Using High Speed Sync with the Mitros is extremely simple. You can control it all from the Odin trigger system or if you have the flash directly connected to your camera. In addition to High Speed Sync, you can also program the Mitros to fire on the first or second curtain, which is nice but not unexpected.

mitros battery

mitros connector ports

The Mitros will accept traditional sync cables as well as USB and external power (as mentioned previously), but don’t go into it expecting PC- it won’t accept it. That means if your trigger system absolutely requires a PC cable, you’re going to be out of luck. Does this bother me? Not particularly. Though it sucks that it won’t connect with some mainstream triggers or light meters that demand PC, PC is a dated connection system that is notorious for failure. I never use PC, but if you do just keep this in mind.

A common complaint, and one I totally understand, is that the Mitros does not have any sort of wireless trigger system built in. It has slave, which you can use with ETTL, but it’s still a bummer that Phottix did not include the TTL receiver in the body of the flash. It would cut out another expense and really tip the scales in favor of Phottix, who already has a great master TTL trigger system in the Odin.

What I liked:
Recycle Rate
Functions, including HSS and ETTL
Connectivity with Odin system
Flash power
Build quality

What could use improvement:
No built-in wireless receiver
No PC sync port

The Mitros is an excellent first go-around at the speed light for Phottix, and it would be an excellent third or fourth try as well. It’s clear they spent a lot of time and effort making a product that was reliable. It’s great when something just works, and the Mitros does that for around $200 less than the Canon 580EX II, that’s a bargain in my book. Phottix also has nailed the TTL trigger/receiver and it works beautifully with the Mitros. As a stand alone TTL flash, it’s one of the better I’ve used and competes well with the Canon 580EX II. It’s not better, but it’s a darn close competitor.

Jaron Schneider's picture

Jaron Schneider is an Fstoppers Contributor and an internationally published writer and cinematographer from San Francisco, California. His clients include Maurice Lacroix, HD Supply, SmugMug, the USAF Thunderbirds and a host of industry professionals.

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20 Comments

It doesn't accept PC Sync cables? So that means I cannot use it with the industry standard Pocketwizard Plus II transceivers?

it has a headphone-jack sync port. you can plug a $1 male-headphone to male-headphone cord instead of a $15 male-headphone to male-PC cord.

In one forum people say the photography industry should already forget the ancient, unreliable, 'easy-going-wrong' PC sync standard, on another forum people are angry when a manufacturer replaces it with the jack sync port. Who understands this...

'PC is a dated connection system that is notorious for failure' - that's it...

It's rough because it's an industry standard, but it's a standard that's simply outdated. There are far more reliable options out there. People are upset when it's not included because of legacy equipment that requires it, and so it keeps being built in. Vicious circle.

How's the af assist beam?is it better than say, Yongnuo YN-568?

I would love to know this as well...Please post an update!!

Anyone tried and found the af assist beam as good as canon/nikon?

I picked up a super super cheap TTL Flash at walmart, I don't even know the brand. I am just a hobbyist and this is my first non-integrated flash. It sure doesn't stack up to the capabilities of the expensive ones, but for the ~$45 I spent on it, it works amazingly well. I mean it has a plastic flash shoe connector so it needs to be used with care, but for taking better family photos indoors it has been amazing. I typically just point it at the ceiling and end up with pretty good looking shots. Better than I could have done with the on-cam flash of my T2i. Next item I would like to get that is actually nice is a decent lens (I am still on the kit 18-55) but this cheap flash I got (note, not the one in the article) has greatly expanded my capability.

So, the flash head rotates 180 degrees ? My SB-800 rotates 270 degrees and I am very dissapointed that it does not rotate 360, like the SB-900. Am I missing something ? Cause otherwise, I would not be able to use this flash to bounce the light backwards, making it only good for use on a light stand, at most ..

It rotates technically 180, but because it stops before making a full circle, it can't be said to go 360. However, it will point in a full circle. Hard to explain, but for the sake of clarity it does go all the way around.

Jaron, thanks for the review. You mention that it does wireless TTL flawlessly with the Odin triggers. Do you know if it works equally well with the Pocketwizard Flex TT5? Since I already have money in that system, I'd be curious to know.

Thanks!

Hi Brian,
It should, but I can't be certain because I did not test it on at PW TT5. I don't see why it wouldn't though, but if you can find a local dealer who sells Phottix I would recommend testing it out.

Thanks, Jaron!

I tested it with flash on Flex TT5 hotshoe and Mini TT1 with Ac3 on top of camera. Tested Auto Mode and Manual mode. A works without any issues.
M Mode power level 3 & 2 didn't see much difference. Have to do detailed tests. I need to test hypersync as well. So far it is good.

And no Quench pin support, so it won't work w/ Radiopopper JrX's... :-P

How about the important stuff?
Flash duration, is it possible to have some sharp action!

the first thing that bothered me was the name...mitros is a really crappy name...:))

Does it have a metal or plastic Hotshoe?

you call this a product REVIEW? more like you just copied and pasted pics from their website and quoted specs and said you liked the recycle time.You would think a reviewer would post some sample pics and real world shots of the product and in action.