Canon EL-1

0.9s Full-Power Recycling

Li-Ion Battery & Charger Included

Radio & Optical Control

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Canon EL-1 Flash

Canon EL-1 Speedlite Flash (23.9 oz./676 g with included LP-EL battery, 24-200mm zoom head with 14mm wide panel and catchlight card, 0.9 second measured recycle time, measured GN 24m/80' at 35mm or 34m/110' at 105mm, $899). bigger. I got mine at B&H. I'd also get mine at Adorama or at Amazon, or used at eBay if you know How to Win at eBay.

This 100% all-content, junk-free website's biggest source of support is when you use those or any of these links to my personally approved sources I've used myself for way over 100 combined years when you get anything, regardless of the country in which you live. Canon does not seal its boxes in any way, so never buy at retail or any other source not on my personally approved list since you'll have no way of knowing if you're missing accessories, getting a defective, damaged, returned, non-USA, store demo or used flash — and all of my personally approved sources allow for 100% cash-back returns for at least 30 days if you don't love your new flash. I've used many of these sources since the 1970s because I can try it in my own hands and return it if I don't love it, and because they ship from secure remote warehouses where no one gets to touch your new flash before you do. Buy only from the approved sources I've used myself for decades for the best prices, service, return policies and selection.

 

Canon EL-1 Flash

Actual photo of LCD screen. bigger.

 

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Introduction       top

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The EL-1 is now Canon's top professional flash. It's special because it uses a completely new power system that includes a dedicated 14 Wh lithium battery that allows it to recycle completely from a full-power dump in just 9/10 of a second. When you're shooting action or at fast frame rates, this is paramount to letting you shoot as fast as you want without having to wait for the battery and flash to catch up.

It has a built-in fan to help cool it so you can shoot longer and harder before it shuts itself off from overheating. It's rated for 170 full-power dumps with the cooling fan. Normal flashes start to give up after 20 full-power dumps, and the EL-1 can shoot at 1.1 FPS at full power for two and a half continuous minutes. Insane!

It easily shoots bursts at 20 FPS at typical power levels. My other pro flashes like my Canon 580EX II also easily shoot at 20 FPS at typical power levels; the big difference is that I can shoot longer bursts or at longer distances with the EL-1 because it replenishes its main capacitor four times as fast.

I got my EL-1 at B&H. I'd also get mine at Adorama or at Amazon, or used at eBay if you know How to Win at eBay.

 

New      top

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blue ball icon © KenRockwell.com New LP-EL battery, included.

blue ball icon © KenRockwell.com L-class weather resistance, thus the red "L" line around the front.

blue ball icon © KenRockwell.com Works as a radio and/or optical master transmitter or receiver.

blue ball icon © KenRockwell.com Manual power sets down to 1/8,192 in third-stops, not that anyone needs to set the flash 13 stops below full power!

blue ball icon © KenRockwell.com Recycling progress bar — as if it matters with a 900 millisecond recycle time!

blue ball icon © KenRockwell.com Internal cooling fan, if needed, for high-power continuous shooting.

blue ball icon © KenRockwell.com Rated for 50 full-power dumps before overheating without fan, or 170 full-power dumps with the cooling fan.

blue ball icon © KenRockwell.com Center control button also works as a 4-way joystick.

 

Good      top

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green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Fastest recycling ever, 0.9 seconds at full power! (runs at 20 FPS at most TTL and other power settings)

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com New, larger LP-EL battery included. It's similar to the LP-E6 batteries, but bigger.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com The new, larger LP-EL battery charges with the included standard LC-E6 charger, the same superb charger included with most Canon DSLRs for the past ten years or more, so you probably don't have to carry an extra charger.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Wired PC sync terminal, radio and optical wireless sync.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Spectrum analyzer measures and displays best radio channels to use.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Built-in infra-red autofocus illuminator.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Legible and well-lit LCD panel.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com LCD panel shows battery charge, and the menu can read it in percent.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Fast, easy and obvious to setup and use.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com It gets even better when you realize that the center control button also works as a 4-way joystick!

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com External power input socket.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com The widest range of contortions I've ever seen for moving the flash head ±180º horizontally and from -7º to +120º vertically, meaning it can point behind you without having to rotate sideways:

Canon EL-1 Flash

+120º upward tilt! bigger.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Built-in slide-out 14mm wide panel and catchlight card:

Canon EL-1 Flash

Slide-Out Wide Panel & Catchlight Card. bigger.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Transmits color temperature information (which varies with power) to the camera for auto white balance optimization.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Continuous Shooting Priority Mode ("CSP") lowers the power by half and raises the camera's ISO by a stop in one action to allow the system to shoot continuously at twice the frame rate.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com High-Speed Sync (HSS) mode.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Front- and rear-curtain modes.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Repeating strobe mode.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Olde-fashioned on-flash-metered "A" exposure mode, but only works properly if your camera lets the flash know the ISO and lens aperture.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Built-in continuous LED flashlight or modeling light; press the LAMP button.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com Metered manual flash, but only with 1D series cameras.

green ball icon © KenRockwell.com 100% U.S.A.-based high-quality technical support at (800) OK-CANON.

 

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red ball icon © KenRockwell.com Offshored to Myanmar (née Burma); not made domestically in Japan.

red ball icon © KenRockwell.com Expensive: $1,099 — for a flash? My first car cost me a lot less than that.

red ball icon © KenRockwell.com While the LCD and the buttons themselves are well illuminated, the button markings are not, making most of the buttons useless in the dark:

Canon EL-1 unlit buttons

Button markings are invisible in the dark. darker.

 

Missing      top

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gray ball icon © KenRockwell.com No remote cord socket; you can't use the SN-R3 cable.

gray ball icon © KenRockwell.com No green fluorescent conversion filter.

 

Compatibility       top

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I got my EL-1 at B&H. I'd also get mine at Adorama or at Amazon, or used at eBay if you know How to Win at eBay.

The EL-1 uses Canon's E-TTL and Canon's E-TTL II flash control systems, which means it works on every Canon mirrorless camera, on every Canon DSLR and on most Canon 35mm EOS film cameras.

It won't work properly on the very old original TTL-flash system in the oldest 35mm cameras. Your camera camera needs to be compatible at least with the E-TTL system.

I doubt that you'd use this $1,100 flash with a 1987 EOS 620; even the most demented film shooters should be using a good EOS camera like the EOS-1V or at least an EOS-3. Geesh.

 

Specifications       top

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I got my EL-1 at B&H. I'd also get mine at Adorama or at Amazon, or used at eBay if you know How to Win at eBay.

 

Rated Power Output       specifications       top

At full power
Rated GN*
Measured GN*
14mm Wide Panel
46' / 14m
35' / 11m
24mm
89' / 27m
63' / 19m
35mm
105' / 32m
80' / 24m
50mm
121' / 37m
87' / 27m
105mm
167' / 51m
110' / 34m
200mm
197' / 60m
134' / 41m

*Guide Number at ISO 100. Divide the guide number by your distance in meters or feet and that's the aperture to use at full manual power.

 

Recycling Time       specifications       top

Rated 0.9 seconds (900 mS) at full power, and that's what I measure.

Much faster or instantaneous at lower (normal) powers.

 

Full-Power Shooting       specifications       top

Internal cooling fan, if needed, for high-power continuous shooting.

Rated for 50 full-power dumps before overheating without fan, or 170 full-power dumps with the cooling fan. This is insane; normal flashes get hot after 20 full-power dumps, and the EL-1 can shoot at 1.1 FPS at full power for two and a half minutes!

 

Flashes per charge       specifications       top

335 at full power.

Many more at normal power levels.

 

Flash Duration       specifications       top

1/960 second (1.04 mS) at full power to 1/107,800 second (9.3 µS) at 1/8,192 power.

 

Flash Head Zoom Range       specifications       top

24 ~ 200mm on full-frame.

Wide Panel: 14mm on full frame.

 

Flash Head Bounce Angles       specifications       top

±180º left and right.

-7º down to +120º up, which actually faces up and then 30º backwards!

 

Infrared Illuminator Range       specifications       top

Up to 33 feet (10 meters) in the center, 16 feet (5 meters) everywhere else.

 

Infrared Illuminator Coverage       specifications       top

Sprays infrared targets on the image as wide as seen with a 28mm lens (on full frame) to cover all the camera's AF sensors.

 

Sync Modes       specifications       top

Front or rear curtain, High Speed Sync (HSS), stroboscopic.

Wired PC (Prontor-Compur) socket or dedicated hot shoe.

Wireless via radio or optical control.

 

Modeling Lamps       specifications       top

Continuous LED or rapid stroboscopic Xenon discharge.

 

Wireless       specifications       top

Optical

Up to 50'/15m indoors.

Groups A, B and/or C.

Channels 1-4.

 

Radio

Up to 10'/30m indoors.

Groups A, B, C, D and/or E.

Channels 1 - 15 or Auto.

Wireless Radio ID 0 ~ 9999.

 

Quality       specifications       top

Flash made in Myanmar (née Burma).

Battery made in Japan.

Stand made in Japan.

Filters (SBA-EL, SCF-ELOR1 and SCF-ELOR2) made in Japan.

Case made in China.

 

Power & Battery       specifications       top

Battery

Canon LP-EL battery for EL-1 Flash

Included LP-EL battery. bigger.

 

Canon LP-EL battery for EL-1 Flash

Included LP-EL battery. bigger.

Included LP-EL battery or optional CP-E4N External 8-AA Battery Pack.

 

Battery Level Indicator

5-segment icon.

Percentage readout in menus.

Battery health and full-power shot counter readout in menus.

 

Charging

LC-E6 Charger

Battery Charger LC-E6.

LC-E6 folding plug 100-240V 50-60 cps charger included.

Rated 2.2 hours to charge from 0% to 100%.

 

Size       specifications       top

3.32 × 5.87 × 5.37 inches WHD.

84.4 × 149.0 × 136.4 millimeters WHD.

 

Weight       specifications       top

23.865 oz. (676.5 g) with included LP-EL battery, actual measured weight.

Rated 20.18 oz. (572 g) stripped naked.

 

Operating Environment       specifications       top

0º ~ 45º C (32º ~ 113º F).

0 to 85% RH.

 

Canon's Model Number       specifications       top

4571C002.

 

Included       specifications       top

LC-E6 Battery Charger and LP-EL battery

LC-E6 Charger

Canon LP-EL battery for EL-1 Flash

 

Case

Canon EL-1 Flash

Included case. bigger.

 

Stand & Filters

Canon EL-1 Flash

Included Stand, Sto-Fen-style Diffuser (SBA-EL), ⅓ CTO (SCF-ELOR1) & CTO (SCF-ELOR1) Filters for Canon EL-1. bigger.

 

Canon EL-1 Flash

Included SBA-EL Sto-Fen style diffuser on EL-1. bigger.

 

Announced       specifications       top

14 October 2020.

 

Promised for       specifications       top

February 2021.

 

Price, U. S. A.       specifications       top

September 2022

$899 at B&H, at Adorama or at Amazon.

About $700 used if you know How to Win at eBay.

 

March 2021

$1,099 at B&H, at Adorama or at Amazon.

 

Optional Accessories      (what's included)   top

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I got my EL-1 at B&H. I'd also get mine at Adorama or at Amazon, or used at eBay if you know How to Win at eBay.

 

OC-E3 Coiled Shoe Extension Cord.

CP-E4N External 8-AA Battery Pack.

 

Getting a Legal U. S. A. Version       top

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This section applies in the U. S. A. only.

I got my EL-1 at B&H. I'd also get mine at Adorama or at Amazon, or used at eBay if you know How to Win at eBay.

Canon EL-1 USA Warranty Card

USA Warranty card. bigger.

Your flash must include a U. S. A. warranty card like the one shown above from Canon U.S.A., Inc. It should be on top inside your box as you open it. The serial number on the card must match the serial number on the sticker on the bottom of your flash head.

If not, you got ripped off with a gray market version from another country. This is why I never buy anyplace other than from my personally approved sources. You just can't take the chance of buying elsewhere, especially at any retail store, because non-U. S. A. versions have no warranty in the U. S. A., and you probably won't be able to get firmware or service for it — even if you're willing to pay out-of-pocket for it when you need it!

Shifty dealers may include color copies of a card from a legitimate U. S. A. item in a gray-market box, hoping you won't check serial numbers and catch their fraud. A card with the wrong serial number means nothing other than that you have no warranty coverage.

The serial number on the box on the sticker below the UPC code doesn't have to match, but it should. If not, it means a shady dealer took things out of boxes and was too sloppy to put them back correctly — and it means you got a used lens if anyone other than you took it out of the box.

If a gray market version saves you $500 the risk might be worth it, but for $200 or less I wouldn't risk having no warranty or support.

Always be sure to check yours while you can still return it, or just don't buy from unapproved sources or at retail so you'll be able to have your camera serviced and get free updated firmware as needed. Get yours from the same places I do and you won't have a problem.

 

Performance       top

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User's Guide   Recommendations

 

I got my EL-1 at B&H. I'd also get mine at Adorama or at Amazon, or used at eBay if you know How to Win at eBay.

 

Measured Power Output       specifications       top

At full power
Measured GN*
Rated GN*
14mm Wide Panel
35' / 11m
46' / 14m
24mm
63' / 19m
89' / 27m
35mm
80' / 24m
105' / 32m
50mm
87' / 27m
121' / 37m
105mm
110' / 34m
167' / 51m
200mm
134' / 41m
197' / 60m

*Guide Number at ISO 100. Divide the guide number by your distance in meters or feet and that's the aperture to use at full manual power.

 

Recycling Time       specifications       top

0.9 seconds (900 mS) at full power, measured.

Much faster or instantaneous at lower (normal) powers.

 

Exposure       specifications       top

Exposure is mostly a factor of your own technique and your camera; your camera's TTL system is more critical to exposure than the flash, which is simply controlled by the camera.

 

Light Quality       specifications       top

I use the light orange ⅓ CTO or SCF-ELOR1 filter most of the time to warm the light.

Light is art; we all want something different.

 

Compared       top

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User's Guide   Recommendations

I got my EL-1 at B&H. I'd also get mine at Adorama or at Amazon, or used at eBay if you know How to Win at eBay.

More Canon Flash Reviews.

The EL-1 stands out for its insanely fast recycling. If I'm shooting action, the EL-1 is the flash to have.

If I'm not shooting loads of bursts at 20 FPS, then I always have my compact 320EX in my case ready to go for everything else.

The EL-1 is a monster flash, but doesn't feel as heavy as you'd think. It dwarfs other full-size professional flashes like my trusty 580EX II:

Canon EL-1, 580EX II and 320EX Flashes Compared

Canon EL-1, 580EX II and 320EX Flashes Compared. bigger.

Full-power GN at 24mm*
63' / 19m
71' / 22m
67' / 20m
53' / 16m
Full-power GN at 50mm*
87' / 27m
101' / 31m
80' / 24m
67' / 20m
Full-power recycling*
0.9s
4.1s
2.4s
3.1s
Battery
4 AA
4 AA
2 AA
Weight w/battery, oz.*
23.9 oz.
18.1 oz.
13.1 oz.
8.4 oz.
Weight w/battery, g.*
676 g.
513 g.
373 g.
239 g.
Made in
Myanmar
Japan
Taiwan
Taiwan
Announced
2020 October
2007 February
2011 February
2018 September
Discontinued
current
2012
2017
current
Price, 03/2021
About $100 used if you know How to Win at eBay.

About $65 used if you know How to Win at eBay.

 

Price, 09/2022
About $90 used if you know How to Win at eBay.

About $50 used if you know How to Win at eBay.

$149

* Actual measured values.

These all take the same pictures, and have surprisingly similar maximum power outputs.

The 580EX II has slightly more maximum power than the EL-1, while the EL-1 recycles over four times as fast. Even at its maximum zoom of "only" 105mm, the 580EX II still has more measured power than the EL-1 does at its 200mm setting; don't be fooled by the zoom head ranges!

The 320EX is much smaller, and impressively has almost as much maximum power (and therefore range) as the the EL-1.

All four can shoot bursts at lower power at 20 FPS; the difference is how many frames it can shoot before it loses steam. While the EL-1 is built for this, I'm also impressed at how the EL-100 also has no problem keeping up with long bursts at fast frame rates.

 

Compared to Current Flashes

(roughly to scale—>)
Canon EL-5 Flash
Canon EL-5 Flash
Canon EL-100
Canon EL-100
 
Full-power GN at 24mm*
63' / 19m
70' / 22m
56' / 17m
53' / 16m
Full-power GN at 50mm*
87' / 27m
105' / 31m
80' / 24m
67' / 20m
Full-power recycling*
0.9s
0.9s
3.0s
3.1s
Battery
4 AA
2 AA
Remote Control
Optical & Radio
Radio only
Radio or Optical
Optical only
Txmttr and/or Slave
Txmttr or Slave
Txmttr or Slave
Txmttr or Slave
Txmttr or Slave
Foot
Standard 5-pin
Multi-Function only
Standard 5-pin
Standard 5-pin
Works with
Just about every EOS camera, digital or 35mm, made since the late 1990s. Only the newest cameras since about 2021 with the "Multi-Function Shoe." Just about every EOS camera, digital or 35mm, made since the late 1990s. Just about every EOS camera, digital or 35mm, made since the late 1990s.
Infrared AF Illuminator
Yes
No (uses white LED)
Yes
No
White LED
Yes
Yes
No
No
Weight w/battery, oz.*
23.9 oz.
20.7 oz.
13.9 oz.
8.4 oz.
Weight w/battery, g.*
676 g.
586 g.
394 g.
239 g.
Made in
Myanmar
Taiwan
Taiwan
Taiwan
Introduced
2020 October
2022 November 02
2015 July 08
2018 September 06
Gone by
current
current
current
current
Price, 03/2021
n/a

$299

 

Price, 09/2022
n/a

$299

$149

Price, 08/2023

$299

$149

* Actual measured values.

All four can shoot bursts at lower power at 20 FPS; the difference is how many frames each can shoot before it loses steam. The EL-5 and EL-1 are the best for this, and the EL-1 adds a fan to keep the flash cooler and let you shoot longer before it overheats.

 

EL-1 versus EL-5

The EL-1 works on almost all cameras, while the EL-5 only works on a few of the newest cameras.

The EL-1 is bigger.

The EL-1 includes a charger, while Canon expects you to provide your own with the EL-5.

The EL-1 has many more external connectors like external power and PC corded sync.

The EL-1 includes more accessories like a diffuser and filters.

The EL-5 has a little more maximum flash power per burst, while the EL-1 has a fan to let you shoot at maximum power for more bursts before the flash melts or slows down.

The EL-1 is for people who need to use it on older cameras without a Multi Function shoe, as well as the newest cameras.

The EL-1 has more internal processing power than the EL-5; the EL-5 as a digital-shoe only flash actually offloads some of its processing to the camera's processors!

 

At full power
EL-5 Measured GN*
EL-1 Measured GN*
14mm Wide Panel
40' / 12m
35' / 11m
24mm
70' / 21m
63' / 19m
35mm
90' / 27m
80' / 24m
50mm
105' / 32m
87' / 27m
105mm
135' / 41m
110' / 34m
200mm
143' / 44m
134' / 41m

*Guide Number at ISO 100. Divide the guide number by your distance in meters or feet and that's the aperture to use at full manual power.

 

At full power
EL-5 Rated GN*
EL-1 Rated GN*
14mm Wide Panel
49' / 15m
46' / 14m
24mm
94' / 29m
89' / 27m
35mm
118' / 36m
105' / 32m
50mm
140' / 43m
121' / 37m
105mm
177' / 54m
167' / 51m
200mm
197' / 60m
197' / 60m

*Guide Number at ISO 100. Divide the guide number by your distance in meters or feet and that's the aperture to use at full manual power.

 

User's Guide       top

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User's Guide   Recommendations

 

I got my EL-1 at B&H. I'd also get mine at Adorama or at Amazon, or used at eBay if you know How to Win at eBay.

 

See also Canon's EL-1 User's Guide PDF and Phil Steele's Advanced Off-Camera Flash course.

 

Battery       user's guide       top

I didn't even bother to unwrap the new LC-E6 charger that comes with the EL-1; it's the same charger I've been using with my DSLRs for many years, so I just popped its new LP-EL battery into my old charger and I'm good to go.

Canon suggests removing the battery from the flash if left unused for a long time, as it could over-discharge and damage the battery.

If the 5-segment battery charge icon isn't precise enough for you, you can read the battery percent by pressing the rear SUB MENU button, then turning the wheel to "information" and pressing the central control button.

If you want to know even more (like battery health and how many full-power flashes you've made), press the center button again.

 

Colored Filters       user's guide       top

Canon EL-1 Flash

Included Stand, Sto-Fen-style Diffuser (SBA-EL), ⅓ CTO (SCF-ELOR1) & CTO (SCF-ELOR1) Filters for Canon EL-1. bigger.

Pro practice is to filter your flash to match the ambient light. Otherwise subject and background take on different color casts — yuck!

In daylight, no filter is needed as the flash matches daylight.

Indoors with tungsten or 3,200K or 2,700K lighting, use the deep orange filter to make the flash match the ambient light. With most cameras set to Auto White Balance the system will magically reset to match the flash because the EL-1 has little feelers that detect which filter you're using and sets the white balance accordingly. Clever!

Using the deep orange filter indoors will prevent very warm backgrounds or blue people. You get either one or the other or a combination of both if you don't match the flash to ambient light, but use the filter and all should look awesome.

Also use either orange filter to taste when the flash is used for fill at sunset — but set your white balance manually to preserve the orange glow to taste (otherwise the Auto WB will try to make everything look too blue).

If I can't avoid shooting under fluorescent light, I use a a small piece of green fluorescent conversion filter taped over the flash. Canon doesn't include one of these.

For manual exposures, the light orange filter eats up ⅓ stop of light, and the deep orange filter uses 1 full stop of light.

 

Getting 20 FPS       user's guide       top

Obviously you can't shoot at 20 FPS at full power if it takes 0.9s to recycle, however we almost never actually shoot at full power.

Even at quarter power (which is still a pretty hefty blast), you can get off two shots at the 20 FPS rate, and at 1/8 you can get off 4 shots at 20 FPS, and so on as the power level drops.

Power levels are usually much less than this in typical TTL shooting. Depending on how close you are to your subject and the level of ambient light, you'll be able to make longer and longer bursts at 20 FPS — and the EL-1 is always back up and ready for another burst a second later.

If you're close enough you conceivably could shoot all day at 20 FPS. It all depends on how much power you're using, which depends on how close you are and the ambient light for fill.

The EL-1 can recharge its capacitor from 0% to 100% in 0.9 seconds (beat that, Porsche), and if you're shooting at low enough power the EL-1 can keep its capacitor full all the time as you blast away; a blast at 1/10 power only brings the capacitor down to 90%, for instance.

So yes, most of the time it works just fine with my R5 at 20 FPS. I'm astonished at just how hot and heavy it blasts away for 20 FPS bursts as I'm shooting; no other flash has been able to keep up as well as the EL-1 does.

 

Multiple Light Setups       user's guide       top

I always use battery powered flash on top of my camera for fill flash when photographing people or pups in strong sunlight, as well as most kinds of light.

For multiple light setups, I use plug-in-the-wall, stand-mounted wired studio strobes, which saves me having to screw around with all the maddening wireless settings. I use one optical slave plugged into my powerpack to trigger the whole wired system wirelessly from any basic on-camera flash and I'm done.

Even the most basic studio strobes are about tens times as powerful as the EL-1 so I can stop down more and shoot at ISO 100 for much sharper images, and studio strobes are built to live on light stands and don't require the fiddling needed to attach little flashes like the EL-1 to a stand — and I never have to change batteries in my studio strobes. My one optical slave always fires everything, so I spend zero time cursing at units not firing.

If you want to mess around with battery powered multiple lights with the EL-1 go right ahead, but I don't use battery powered shoe-mount strobes for multiple light setups. My entire pro strobe system, complete with stands and umbrellas, cost me half of what an EL-1 costs — and I've been using the same set of used studio strobes for close to 20 years! Today you can get a complete set of wired strobes, stands and umbrellas for $400 new!

I doubt the EL-1 has enough power to work well (meaning being able to shoot at at least f/8 at ISO 100) with umbrellas. If I have to shoot a gig at another location, my whole strobe system pops into one case and I'm on the road.

 

High-Power Battleshort       user's guide       top

"Battleshort" is military term used in complex combat and weapons systems, like a US Navy destroyer. It's a setting that overrides safety shutoffs if we're engaged in active combat, where being able to continue to fight is more important than worrying about some piece of overloaded gear shutting down. Battleshort bypasses all the safety shutdowns and makes everything keep going.

Hidden in the "DON'T DO THIS" section of Canon's manual is that if you open the battery door after the flash shuts down from overheating, it cancels the shutdown!

Don't do this, unless you don't mind risking melting or setting your flash on fire — but if your life or career depends on getting the shot, there you go.

 

Recommendations       top

Introduction   New   Good   Bad   Missing

Compatibility   Specifications   Accessories

USA Version   Performance   Compared

User's Guide   Recommendations

I got my EL-1 at B&H. I'd also get mine at Adorama or at Amazon, or used at eBay if you know How to Win at eBay.

The biggest reasons for the EL-1 are its fast recycling and ability to belt out loads of high-speed bursts again and again in ways that would melt any other ordinary flash.

Shoot news, sports, action or events for a living? Get yourself an EL-1. Need ultrafast recycling or need to shoot lots of rapid bursts at longer distances? Get yourself an EL-1. Need to shoot hard and heavy without waiting for your flash to cool off? Get yourself an EL-1.

If you're not shooting so hard and fast, any other Canon flash works as well for a lot less money. A flash is just a xenon tube, a capacitor and a battery. Exposure is controlled by the camera's TTL system, not by the flash itself. Two of my favorites are my fully professional professional 580EX II and my compact 320EX. The 580EX II is even a little bit more powerful than the EL-1, and either of them are available used (see the links at each review) for less than one tenth of the price of a new EL-1, which does the same thing if you're not trying to shoot fast bursts or at full power all day, every day — but ooooh, I so love the EL-1 for shooting all my portrait sessions at 20 FPS in short bursts to get lots of similars which lets me pick the absolutely best expression of several. This alone can give you a competitive professional edge where you didn't think you need speed; just shoot three-shot bursts where you used to shoot just one frame and see what happens.

I got my EL-1 at B&H. I'd also get mine at Adorama or at Amazon, or used at eBay if you know How to Win at eBay.

 

Is It Worth It?

It is, if you need speed and can afford it.

If all you need is an on-camera flash for general shooting and don't shoot that hard or fast to need the speed, then no, it isn't worth it if you actually have to work for a living and money matters. Get a 580EX II for about about $100 used if you know How to Win at eBay and it will take exactly the same pictures with even a little bit more range.

See also Is It Worth It.

 

This 100% all-content, junk-free website's biggest source of support is when you use those or any of these links to my personally approved sources I've used myself for way over 100 combined years when you get anything, regardless of the country in which you live. Canon does not seal its boxes in any way, so never buy at retail or any other source not on my personally approved list since you'll have no way of knowing if you're missing accessories, getting a defective, damaged, returned, non-USA, store demo or used flash — and all of my personally approved sources allow for 100% cash-back returns for at least 30 days if you don't love your new flash. I've used many of these sources since the 1970s because I can try it in my own hands and return it if I don't love it, and because they ship from secure remote warehouses where no one gets to touch your new flash before you do. Buy only from the approved sources I've used myself for decades for the best prices, service, return policies and selection.

Thanks for helping me help you!

Ken.

 

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14 Septembrr 2022, 22-26, 29 March 2021, Big Rock Park 04 March 2021