You will not be able to use TTL with these off camera.
The way to do it would be use them on manual and use RF602 radio triggers. You put a transmitter on the hotshoe and when it fires it will activate any recievers you have connected on the flashguns.
I guess it really depends on what you are shooting and how much use the lighting kit will get.
Studio lighting is superb but at a cost. Additionally you are pretty limited to mains supply unless you get really posh kit with battery packs.
Using flashguns can be just as effective and a lot cheaper. In addition you can use in the field rather than just the studio.
Google strobist 101 and have a read through before you make any choices.
Very effective results can be had from 2 or 3 manual guns, radio triggers and some light modifiers (reflectors, snoots, softboxes, etc)
Nikons CLS is very trick and I don't profess to understand it at the moment. I only have one SB600 and until yesterday I had no way of even using the CLS on it. Now I have a D90 I may have a play with it soon.
Have a look for a book called "hot shoe Diaries" this apparently has a lot of info about using Nikons guns and CLS.
Andy
You are right Hoppy
My answer is based on the OPs question which did not have a lot of detail. A lot will depend on budget and what the kit is to be used for.
When I say that TTL cannot be used I meant off-camera and with the guns that FITP sells. From reading on the internet I believed that the 465 Nikon dedicated one did not have a built in reciever so could not be used off camera without a lead. If this is incorrect then I apologise.
Russ - I assume you now have plenty to think about and have more idea of the various options open to you. Do some more research and let us know your budget and needs. I am confident that somebody will be able to help you narrow down your choices.
Andy
Cheers team.
I think at this stage I'm very much inclined to avoid studio lighting, as I think outdoor photography is something I'm much more keen on - so whatever could be powered by 4 x AAs (assumably).
Ideally I'd like some flash guns that I had control of their output from the menu on my D700, in the way which I'm practising to do so with my SB-900 at the moment (using the + - EV compensation), whilst using the built-in flash as commander.
However ones which I could use as slaves, yet still be able to control how much light they release even if manually, is also what I'd be happy to use.
I'm looking to spend less than £100 per flash gun, and I was thinking of buying two.
No, that's what I mean. Auto-TTL works fine off camera, including with the new Yongnuo TTL guns that FITP is selling![]()
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Is this correct? I was under the impression that these would fire optically in manual mode. There is the normal "cell" mode and a pre-flash ignore mode. So with the Yongnuo it 'reads' the pre-flash TTL metering info from the Commander/built in flash?