Blue439
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I have recently transitioned from Phottix studio strobes to Godox monolights. From my earlier days, also remain a Nikon SB-900 speedlight, as well as two Phottix Mitros+ for Nikon ones.
I used to be able to set and fire all those speedlights from my Phottix Odin II transmitter, and I assumed I would be able to do the same thing with my new “Odin II–equivalent”, namely the X Pro II transmitter (technology does go forward, not backward, right?). I looked around to see what receiver would be able to do the job on the speedlight side, and I found the X1R–N (the latter meaning “for Nikon”, there is an X1R–C for Canon and so on) that looked very much like my old Phottix Odin receiver.
It was a bit difficult at first. I thought the easiest way to go would be to set the SB-900 to Manual, but it didn’t work. I found nothing really straightforward on how to achieve what I wanted on the internet, so I ended up asking the techs at Strobepro in Canada, even though I never was a customer of theirs.
Kevin from Strobepro replied swiftly and in a very detailed manner, and his bottomline advice was: set the SB-900 to TTL, and not to M! I did, and it works fine: I can remotely set, adjust and trigger my SB-900 from the X Pro II transmitter on my Nikon Z7 II.
Now, I need to try with the Mitros+ flashes. Them being “for Nikon” flashes, I assume it shouldn’t be too difficult, but we’ll have to confirm that. I’ll come back here to report, hopefully shortly.

I used to be able to set and fire all those speedlights from my Phottix Odin II transmitter, and I assumed I would be able to do the same thing with my new “Odin II–equivalent”, namely the X Pro II transmitter (technology does go forward, not backward, right?). I looked around to see what receiver would be able to do the job on the speedlight side, and I found the X1R–N (the latter meaning “for Nikon”, there is an X1R–C for Canon and so on) that looked very much like my old Phottix Odin receiver.
It was a bit difficult at first. I thought the easiest way to go would be to set the SB-900 to Manual, but it didn’t work. I found nothing really straightforward on how to achieve what I wanted on the internet, so I ended up asking the techs at Strobepro in Canada, even though I never was a customer of theirs.
Kevin from Strobepro replied swiftly and in a very detailed manner, and his bottomline advice was: set the SB-900 to TTL, and not to M! I did, and it works fine: I can remotely set, adjust and trigger my SB-900 from the X Pro II transmitter on my Nikon Z7 II.
Now, I need to try with the Mitros+ flashes. Them being “for Nikon” flashes, I assume it shouldn’t be too difficult, but we’ll have to confirm that. I’ll come back here to report, hopefully shortly.

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