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Nikon announces SB-910 high-end Speedlight

Nikon has announced the SB-910, the flagship flashgun in its Speedlight range. Replacing the SB-900, the 910 gains the simpler graphic user interface (GUI) of the less powerful SB-700. Its more advanced thermal protection system slows the flash recycle time, rather than it simply shutting down to prevent overheating. It comes with hard filters for matching fluorescent and tungsten lighting and automatically switches the camera's white balance to match the filter. Similarly it adjusts the available zoom steps to suit the body (FX or DX) that it's attached to. The SB910 will be available from mid-December, priced around $549.95.

New Nikon SB-910 Speedlight Offers Advanced Flash Technology and Intelligent Features

MELVILLE, N.Y. (November 29, 2011) – Today, Nikon Inc. announced the addition of a new flagship speedlight, the powerful and capable SB-910 speedlight. Building on the versatility of Nikon’s Creative Lighting System (CLS), the SB-910 incorporates an enhanced intuitive operating system and graphic user interface (GUI). The SB-910 speedlight comes equipped with a wide zoom range covering the most popular focal lengths as well as FX/DX-format identification that optimizes zoom settings based on the camera body. This new speedlight also provides more efficient battery usage as well as an enhanced Thermal Cut-Out function.

“As Nikon’s new flagship speedlight, the SB-910 provides exceptional high performance and versatility that users have come to value in Nikon’s Creative Lighting System,” said Lisa Osorio, general manager of marketing at Nikon Inc. “By addressing the needs of photographers that work in challenging lighting scenarios, the SB-910 delivers a new level of portable lighting functionality, with performance and intelligent features that adapt to a wide range of lighting challenges.”

The SB-910 speedlight is designed to provide easy operation and menu navigation, with its enhanced operating system featuring illuminated function buttons, a dedicated Menu button with quick access to custom settings and an improved LCD screen graphic user interface. Whether the unit is used as an on-camera flash, wireless commander or remote, the SB-910 speedlight will provide dependable and consistent flash exposure. Engineered to address the creative lighting challenges faced by today’s photographers, the SB-910 speedlight includes quick on-demand performance and the ability to adapt seamlessly to nearly any possible lighting scenario.

Additionally, the new SB-910 incorporates a new Thermal Cut-Out function, which offers protection against damage to the flash panel and body from overheating during continuous flash use. Now, the flash recycling time is automatically delayed if a significant rise in temperature is detected, rather than ceasing operation to protect the unit. For additional durability, heat-resistance and ease-of-use, the SB-910 uses new hard-type color compensation filters for fluorescent and incandescent color temperature balancing. When using these filters, the flash automatically recognizes which filter is being used and adjusts white balance accordingly on the connected Nikon D-SLR camera. Additionally, the AF-assist illuminator of the SB-910 is compatible with the complete line of AF systems used in Nikon D-SLR cameras.

The SB-910 speedlight features three illumination patterns (standard, center-weighted and even) which are designed to match almost any shooting situation when utilizing the speedlight. The “standard” pattern will cover all conventional, standard flash coverage. The “center-weighted” pattern provides larger guide numbers than other light distribution types at the same focal lengths. This illumination pattern is ideal for subjects such as portraits, in which the light falloff at the image edges can be disregarded. When “even” is selected, the light from the flash will cover a subject from the center to the edges without light falloff. This pattern is applicable for shooting group photographs indoors. For coverage with a variety of lenses, the SB-910 speedlight incorporates a multi-step power zoom range that covers a wide 17-200mm angle of view, and can automatically detect Nikon FX and Nikon DX formats to help select suitable light distribution.

The SB-910 speedlight includes support for Nikon’s advanced wireless TTL operation and can function as a wireless commander with control over three separate groups of speedlights or as a remote speedlight triggered by other SB-910 speedlights, SB-700 speedlights, SU-800 Wireless Commander or the built-in speedlight set to Commander Mode on compatible Nikon D-SLR cameras. The SB-910 incorporates a high-speed recycling time of approximately 2.5 seconds for full power with NiMH batteries, and approximately 3.0 seconds with AA Alkaline batteries.

Optional water guards will be available for select cameras to protect the connection between the flash and camera, allowing users to utilize the flash when weather conditions are less than ideal. The SJ-4 Color Filter set provides a Warming, Red, Yellow or Blue filter for adding color to the background, foreground or just to accent the scene. The SB-910 will come equipped with the AS-21 Speedlight Stand, SW-13H Diffusion Dome, SZ-2FL and SZ-2TN hard type Color Compensation Filters and SS-910 soft case.

Price and Availability

Nikon’s new flagship speedlight, the SB-910, will be available in mid-December 2011 for a SRP*of $549.95. For more information, please visit www.nikonusa.com.

*SRP (Suggested Retail Price) listed only as a suggestion. Actual prices are set by dealers and are subject to change at any time.

Comments

Comments

Total comments: 118
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polatkan

I have bought yesterday sb 910 but i am not sure which battery i can buy ? can someone comment ?

0 upvotes
rumbapassion

I am really annoyed that Nikon has brought out the sb910 now finally admitting there was a problem with the overheating. They should be offering sb900 owners a substantial discount to buy the sb910. I have had overheating several times and even last night when I had to take a dance floorshow, my SB900 did it again. I was so annoyed I missed the best shots because I had to stop and start all the time. I love my Nikon cameras but seriously NIkon you have let me down with the SB900.

1 upvote
Dabbler

too bad I can't use this puppy on my V1 !

0 upvotes
loe54

Too Late, just have bought a Quantum. Not cheap but impressive results........

0 upvotes
yabokkie

the sad thing is that I cannot clip it on my Canon and use all the advanced features.

0 upvotes
Mtsuoka

it's pretty sad that as a troll you are pretty low quality

0 upvotes
gdyoung

I love the idea that the thermal cutoff doesn't stop the flash completely but only slows the recycle. Much improved over the SB900.

www.dslrwarehouse.com

0 upvotes
SiPat

£449 in the UK -- that's US$700

0 upvotes
achilles1974

Yikes. Makes me wonder why not buy from BHPhoto in the U.S. and have them ship to UK. www.bhphotovideo.com These guys are great.

0 upvotes
Jez EMIN

Taking a picture in the UK is VERY expensive....

1 upvote
Poss

Ummm... what is new on this unit really? Illuminated buttons? A thermal nanny no better than the one on the SB900? Slightly tweaked UI? What really changed that either adds substance or changes any of the SB900's shortcomings?

Seriously, I read this marketing gobbledegook three times and I can't figure out why this is not called SB900.00.01

I must be slow or something....

3 upvotes
yabokkie

Nikon may consider your suggestion and name their next model 911.

0 upvotes
learnerguy

I have a Nikon D3100. Kindly suggest me a 'good flash' unit which can be a good alternative to these pricey Nikon units.

0 upvotes
Seno prabowo

SB700 or SB600 (because both of them have AF Assist, not like SB400, so you can focus easier in the dark)

0 upvotes
MEBEE

Nissin Di622 MARK II or Metz mecablitz 44 AF-1 digital would do great on D3100 and at much lower prices.

0 upvotes
harrysamuel

Why buy a $550.00 flashes when you can buy $75.00 flashes that put out the same amount light. The only reason I can think of is you have to learn how to use a manual flash, and how to light a scene/subject. And with crappy CLS, the flashes can't be hided behind objects. For $550.00 I want built in radio triggers, and the flashes need to do the dishes.

Nikon needs to run a buy two get two free promotion to get me to buy any more Nikon flashes. The SB800 at $320.00 was the last flash I bought. $550.00 for one flash without radio triggers built in?

For any person using more than one on camera flash you have to be crazy to use Nikon speedlights. When Canon has the brains to build a new flash with built in radio triggers AND sell a FOUR pack in the $1000.00 range 30 years of Nikon equipment might go up on E-bay.

1 upvote
harrysamuel

Nikon when switching from the SB80Dx to the SB800 should have had an upgrade discount. At the $550.00 price point Nikon should let me trade in my SB-10. I have the Lumopro LP160, $150.00 direct and instead of dialing in settings on my SB800 that I use for a master, using all my flashes on manual, I have go to the flash and change settings. The LP160 works fine and I just ordered a Yongnuo YN-560 for $75.00 direct. From all the reviews it will do the same job.

10 flashes @ $550.00 = $5,500.00 10 flashes @t $75.00 = $750.00

Ok 10 is a lot of flashes, but I do work with two, and sometimes three photographers. If this YN-560 works for me, which I am sure it will, I am done with Nikon flashes.

Radio trigger built in, packs of four or five for $x,x99.99 might work for me.
$550.00 each is fine for the consumer who buys one. For anyone who knows how to light and needs several $550.00 is not going to fly.

1 upvote
Zvonimir Tosic

All flashes have a horrid UI and controls, made probably by chief Inquisitors in camera manufacturing companies. If Apple did one, it would come with Siri, so you can just talk to it how to fire and when.

Comment edited 3 minutes after posting
1 upvote
haoz

yea, only to have it tellling you it doesnt understands what you just said or gives you all the wrong settings 90% of the time.

2 upvotes
costinul_ala

If apple made one you would have to sell your camera to get it and then attach it to your iPhone with an iAdapter. They you will buy an app to fire the flash and you would be shouting around "fire, fire" until finally you would get arrested.
Then you can escape jail if your iPhone will explode also and break the locks

4 upvotes
gillamoto
0 upvotes
HeezDeadJim

If Apple made a flash, they'd have so much other features (like voice recognition, GPS, touchscreen sliders, glow-in-the-dark sleep mode) that they'd forget the main purpose of the flash: To act as a flash!

I'm glaring at you Apple for laughably screwing up the iPhone 4 and dropping calls. Forget it's a phone....it has so many other features to distract you from!

0 upvotes
Mtsuoka

fire! fire! fire!

0 upvotes
photomy

Or it might say back:

"I'm melting!, I'm melting!"

Comment edited 1 minute after posting
0 upvotes
gl2k

In Europe 530€ ... the SB-900 is about 330€ (incl. VAT)
200€ premium for ... uhm dunno

Guess it's time to buy a couple of almost cheap SB-900s.

0 upvotes
Franco8

I would not hesitate to spend an extra $200 on top if it had a true radio control.
Instead of line of sight. And order five of them.
Why don't Nikon talk to photographers and ask what they want.

2 upvotes
mystic-bright

to look good some genius came out with the idea of shutting down the beast (the 900) at a higher temperature: the idea was to cut the expenses of the in-warranty repairs. Problem was that many didn't buy it just because of that. So the savings went down to the floor. well done! The price of the new one is still astronomical but at least can be a little more useful now that they took that idiotic cut-off thing away.

Comment edited 1 minute after posting
0 upvotes
FuzzTheKingOfTrees

So they've swapped the zoom button for a menu button.

Changed the gel filters for hard ones but instead of giving you two levels of CTO and florescent you now get one of each and you no longer get blue and red included in the pack, you have to buy them separately. Hard filters are probably better but this is flagship flash so should really include more than two.

Lastly they've adopted the temperature system from the SB700, not used one so I can't say if it's better. I've hit on the SB900 warning once and it was annoying because I didn't feel I was working the flash particularly hard. Also this change could have been provided by a firmware update.

So in conclusion, Nikon have made one change to the buttons, added a piece of plastic to the kit that could have been released as an accessory and made a change to the firmware that should have been released as a fix to existing SB900 owners.

0 upvotes
stanginit

$550 can you send a text on it?

0 upvotes
Higuma

Here's the question for the ages -

~ Will the new included "hard" type Color Balance filters work with the SB-900 ????

meaning -> snap on the SB-900 and use the same auto-recognition of balance.... If so order me a hand full of each right away so I can do away with some of my gels....

That WOULD be a big bonus.......

Comment edited 9 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
singveld

wow first flash i see that can do 200mm, canon better come out with new flash that can match it. or people will move to nikon.

0 upvotes
Kartika Sari

even the earlier sb900 can zoom to 200mm

0 upvotes
Lan

Is it possible to override the filter/whitebalance detection options?

Occasionally I like to use flash with different wb settings to those on the camera, as the warm/cool balance can make a nice contrast...

0 upvotes
Ilkka Nissilä

You can override it if you shoot raw.

0 upvotes
ianz28

Setting white balance on the camera should also override it I'd imagine.

0 upvotes
FuzzTheKingOfTrees

White balance is only set if set to auto on the camera, it's also only set on cameras newer than the D300

0 upvotes
AbrasiveReducer

I like the slower recyling time but what I'm really hoping for is a unit that is much larger than the SB-900.

2 upvotes
Gholson21
0 upvotes
xmeda

...and still less powerful than for example an old AF540FGZ from Pentax.. :)

1 upvote
amateurphotographer

Many times my SB900 has overheated in A/TTL mode during event shoots where you are firing every few minutes. Yes have backup flash. The manual does say to use Manual mode to get more juice out of batteries, and I guess to slows down overheating. Manual Mode is not practical when the light conditions can change rapidly at events. Slowing down the recycle rate doesn't really help me when I have missed the shot in TTL mode. Seems like only a temp solution to the overheating prob.

May buy a SB910, but need to see reviews in heavy use in A/TTL mode. Have 4x SB900, but usually only use them all when have time for Manual Mode set up, so unlikely to replace all SB900s.
The SB900 menu is okay, the more you use it the easier it becomes.
- Radio wireless would save lugging around PWs + AC3.
- LED light (SB1000?)
- Battery indicator displayed all the time, see it when i have ran out of juice.
- Form factor- smaller nice, but must clear longer lenses.
- SB900 functions good enough

1 upvote
Poss

Can we get a PROPER firmware upgrade for the "old" SB900 now please?
And what's with the naming now... SB910... starting to sound like German WWII planes here...

1 upvote
Hawaii-geek

+1
And how hard is it to do a sb900 FW upgrade for this same ... NO STOP , recycle slow down (when it starts to get hot only pls).
* Thought this is what FW upgradability was for?
and maybe a simple Stick-ON Heat Sink for the sb900.

own four(4) sb900's ... I am not bitter :)

0 upvotes
Franco8

Wait for the replacemant of the SB 900 it could be the SB 911

0 upvotes
Poss

Nah, they will call it FW190 Dora...

0 upvotes