discussion, gear, and photography journal
Quality Camera Sales Australia
Canon N3 socket on 50D body
Canon N3 socket on 50D body
Background

Until recently, my primary camera was a Canon 350D, which uses a 2.5mm stereo socket (E3) for connecting a shutter release. I built a homebrew shutter release for it, which worked very effectively.

Having recently upgraded to a Canon 50D, I can no longer use my homebrew shutter release, as the 50D has an N3 socket, rather than am E3 socket (2.5mm stereo socket). Rather than purchase a complete shutter release for the 50D, I did some research into the Canon N3 Connector Pinout and Wiring, to see if I could source an N3 connector, so I could modify my shutter release, and add an N3 connector to it.


Sourcing an N3 Connector

As mentioned in my earlier post on the Canon N3 Connector Pinout and Wiring, there are a number of options for sourcing an N3 connector, including:
  1. Buy a genuine Canon remote
  2. Buy a genuine Canon or Pocket Wizard/etc cable
  3. Buy a cheap remote from eBay
  4. Make your own N3 connector
The genuine Canon remotes are not particularly cheap, and having previously made a homebrew shutter release for my 350D, I was not prepared to part with that much money for something that is just a double-action switch.

I wanted to be able to re-use my homebrew shutter release, and just modify it by adding an N3 connector, to allow it to be used with the 50D.

The cheapest option for obtaining an N3 connector was to buy a cheap remote on eBay, and cannibalise it, discarding the remote, and just using the N3 connector.


Cheap Remotes on eBay

Some quick searching on eBay turned up lots of remotes, including many surprisingly cheap remotes from various vendors located in Hong Kong.

The cheapest suitable remote I could find was listed by outstandingstore111 with a "buy it now" price of just AUD$4.90 plus AUD$4.50 postage. It was listed on eBay as "RS-80N3 Remote Shutter for Canon EOS 5D 20D 30D 40D", and appeared to be a copy of Canon's RS-80N3 remote, which typically retails for USD$50 or AUD$90.

I subsequently bought and paid for the remote via eBay, and waited for it to arrive in the mail. I was expecting to have to spend more than that just for the N3 connector, and didn't have high expectations on the quality of the remote, due to the low cost.


The Remote

Later that week, the remote arrived in the mail. The box was labelled as "Yongnuo Remote Switch RS-C3", and upon initial inspection, the quality of the remote was much better than I was expecting.

Here is a quick photo of the Yongnuo remote.

Yongnuo remote shutter release
Yongnuo remote shutter release

I'll post a review of the Yongnuo remote in the near future.


Updates - reviews of the following remotes have now been published:
If you enjoyed this post, then subscribe to my RSS feed,
or subscribe by email to get updates directly in your inbox.
Comments:
Nick wrote at 2009-01-28 13:16

Does this mean you're going to use the remote you purchased rather than just the connector and scrap your previous idea?

Martin wrote at 2009-01-28 13:48

@Nick: that's right. The quality of the remote was significantly better than I was expecting, so rather than canibalise it just for the N3 connector, I'll use the complete remote.

Eric wrote at 2009-07-06 01:47

You are a life saver. I spend the last three hours going through everything I could find on the net on wireless remotes and came across a reference to your blog and bingo, I hit the mother load. Thank you for doing all that work in reviewing the Phottix units. I'm not sure but I believe I also saw a wireless version by Yongnuo (Model "Concept" TC80) Wonder how that performs. Can spend a lot of time trying to keep up with everything!! Thanks again, Eric

Leave a comment:
Name:
Email address (required):  (will not be published)
URL (optional):
Comments
(no HTML allowed,
some BBcode allowed):
BBcode allowed in comments:
[b]bold[/b]
[i]italics[/b]
[url=http://server/path]link name[/url]
[img]http://server/path/image.jpg[/img]
  
Note that comments are moderated, and will not appear immediately.
Please do not include your URL in the comment text, and please use your personal name or initials and not your business name, as that comes across as spam.
Quality Camera Sales Australia
advertise here?
HostGator webhosting
chromasia Photoshop tutorials

B and H B andH
martybugs.net