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Amazon Affiliate Link: https://amzn.to/4nCnxW9 Price as reviewed: $33 T1 2.4G Wireless Mini Flash Trigger for Canon Nikon Sony DSLR Cameras Wireless Flash Trigger Transmitter and Receiver for Camera Flashes,Tiny Trigger,Full Light Control From the ZENIKO Store This kit includes two "T1" remote flash units form Zeniko. They are identical, but you slide the selection switch on one to RX (to be the remote receiver) and the other one to TX (to be the transmitter that fits on top of your camera's hot shoe). They each have a hot shoe attachment point on the bottom and top, so you can place a flash onto the top of the transmitter on your camera, have a flash on your camera as normal, and also have a remote flash mounted elsewhere with the receiver that triggers it. The kit includes two units but only one charging cable (USB-A to USB-C). It only draws 1 watt (0.2 amps at 5 volts) so any USB port should be able to charge it with no problems. It successfully negotiates USB-C Power Delivery, so you can also charge the units with a USB-C PD charger cable like you would have for a cell phone. In addition to the RX/TX selection switch, each unit has two buttons, a Power/flash trigger and a pairing button. I found it easy to pair the two units, and you can tap the power/flash button to test your connection (from the transmitter) or the flash unit (from the receiver). There is a lag between when you trigger the shutter and when the remote flash unit fires. On my Sony A6300 camera, at 1/250th of a second shutter speed I would get the very top part of the image captured without flash and the rest of the image would have the illumination from the flash unit, so I had to use 1/100th second shutter speed (or slower) with this remote triggering flash unit. In most situations this isn't an issue, but is something to be aware of if you use super short shutter speeds. The manual claims a 50m (150ft) range, and I have verified this outdoors in a line of sight setup. I expect the range will be plenty indoors for just about any situation you find yourself in. The manual claims an 8 hour runtime on the receiver (40 hours on the transmitter) and I tested this by leaving them on for 8.5 hours (triggering the flash every 30 minutes so it wouldn't got into hibernation mode) and the system was still working after that.