
Godox TT685S II Flash (Sony)
An integrated 2.4 GHz X radio system is incorporated into the TT685S for wireless triggering. Able to be set up as a master or slave, this flash will help you create a versatile lighting setup with a range of 328' and support for 32 channels and four groups. Functions as a transmitter unit for the V1, AD200Pro, and AD300Pro flash systems. Also functions as a receiver unit for X1, X2, XPro, and V1 transmitter units. Being compatible with the Sony ADI / P-TTL system, users will enjoy numerous automated flash settings and the ability to use functions such as high-speed sync up to 1/8000 seconds. With a guide number of 197' at ISO 100 the TT685S will easily illuminate most subjects. It also features a zoom head with a range of 20-200mm. Manual power control from 1/1 to 1/128 in 1/3 EV steps. The flash head can be tilted from -7 to 120° and rotated a total of 330° for controlling bounce and where the light falls on the scene.
An integrated 2.4 GHz X radio system is incorporated into the TT685S for wireless triggering. Able to be set up as a master or slave, this flash will help you create a versatile lighting setup with a range of 328' and support for 32 channels and four groups. Functions as a transmitter unit for the V1, AD200Pro, and AD300Pro flash systems. Also functions as a receiver unit for X1, X2, XPro, and V1 transmitter units. Being compatible with the Sony ADI / P-TTL system, users will enjoy numerous automated flash settings and the ability to use functions such as high-speed sync up to 1/8000 seconds. With a guide number of 197' at ISO 100 the TT685S will easily illuminate most subjects. It also features a zoom head with a range of 20-200mm. Manual power control from 1/1 to 1/128 in 1/3 EV steps. The flash head can be tilted from -7 to 120° and rotated a total of 330° for controlling bounce and where the light falls on the scene.
An integrated 2.4 GHz X radio system is incorporated into the TT685S for wireless triggering. Able to be set up as a master or slave, this flash will help you create a versatile lighting setup with a range of 328' and support for 32 channels and four groups. Functions as a transmitter unit for the V1, AD200Pro, and AD300Pro flash systems. Also functions as a receiver unit for X1, X2, XPro, and V1 transmitter units. Being compatible with the Sony ADI / P-TTL system, users will enjoy numerous automated flash settings and the ability to use functions such as high-speed sync up to 1/8000 seconds. With a guide number of 197' at ISO 100 the TT685S will easily illuminate most subjects. It also features a zoom head with a range of 20-200mm. Manual power control from 1/1 to 1/128 in 1/3 EV steps. The flash head can be tilted from -7 to 120° and rotated a total of 330° for controlling bounce and where the light falls on the scene.
An integrated 2.4 GHz X radio system is incorporated into the TT685S for wireless triggering. Able to be set up as a master or slave, this flash will help you create a versatile lighting setup with a range of 328' and support for 32 channels and four groups. Functions as a transmitter unit for the V1, AD200Pro, and AD300Pro flash systems. Also functions as a receiver unit for X1, X2, XPro, and V1 transmitter units. Being compatible with the Sony ADI / P-TTL system, users will enjoy numerous automated flash settings and the ability to use functions such as high-speed sync up to 1/8000 seconds. With a guide number of 197' at ISO 100 the TT685S will easily illuminate most subjects. It also features a zoom head with a range of 20-200mm. Manual power control from 1/1 to 1/128 in 1/3 EV steps. The flash head can be tilted from -7 to 120° and rotated a total of 330° for controlling bounce and where the light falls on the scene.
in 29 offers
The lowest price for Godox TT685S II Flash (Sony) right now is $159.00 at cccwarehouse.com.au, compared across 22 retailers.
The all-time low was $99.00 on 24 Apr 2026 — today's price is 61% above the lowest ever. It has been notably cheaper before — worth setting a price alert.
Prices last updated 30 May 2026.
Last updated at 30/05/2026 14:55:51
Godox TT685IIS
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Godox TT685II-S Flash for Sony, HSS TTL Camera Flash Speedlite, 1/8000s GN60 2.4G X Wireless, 0.1-2.6s Recycle Time, Speedlight Flash with TCM Instant
Free delivery
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Godox TT685S II Flash for Sony Camears Wireless TTL
Delivery $17.45
Godox TT685IIS ( Mark II ) Speed Light Flash Thinklite TTL for Sony
Delivery between 5–10 June $18.97
Godox TT685S II On-Camera Flash (SONY)
Free delivery
Godox TT685IIS TTL Speedlight Flash for Sony
Delivery $9.95
Godox TT685S II On-Camera Flash (SONY)
Delivery $10
Godox TT685IIS TTL Speedlight Flash for Sony
Delivery $10
Godox TT685IIS TTL Speedlight Flash for Sony
Delivery $10
Godox TT685S II On-Camera Flash (SONY)
Delivery $7.95
originally posted on bhphotovideo.com
The Godox TT685II flash and XPro Trigger make for a very capable system for both on camera and off camera flash. The flash's modes for being optical triggered, for being an on-camera wireless master, and an off camera wireless flash are very good. This is a complicated system that requires a detailed understanding of the system's modes and features. Unfortunately the provided document does not describe enough of the details which can cause much frustration for the user. Thankfully, there videos on YouTube that are essential for getting to know how to use this system.
originally posted on bhphotovideo.com
I have Godox speedlights that are 5+ years old that work great. The latest TT685S II speedlights are absolute trash.I used mine for 2-3 shoots before it snapped while on-camera; the bottom of flash staying in the hotshoe of my A7III, the top half literally falling to the ground with a dramatic explosion of eneloop rechargeables.B&H promptly replaced the item assuming the first to be defective. I used it at a wedding for about an hour before the same exact thing happened on my A7IV.With the new hotshoe-lock design, there's no way to over-tighten these TT685S II. They only have one tightness setting, so there is no way this is due to over-tightening on the hotshoe.B&H is great; they shouldn't let companies like Godox (aka flashpoint, aka whatever) with ... MoreI have Godox speedlights that are 5+ years old that work great. The latest TT685S II speedlights are absolute trash.I used mine for 2-3 shoots before it snapped while on-camera; the bottom of flash staying in the hotshoe of my A7III, the top half literally falling to the ground with a dramatic explosion of eneloop rechargeables.B&H promptly replaced the item assuming the first to be defective. I used it at a wedding for about an hour before the same exact thing happened on my A7IV.With the new hotshoe-lock design, there's no way to over-tighten these TT685S II. They only have one tightness setting, so there is no way this is due to over-tightening on the hotshoe.B&H is great; they shouldn't let companies like Godox (aka flashpoint, aka whatever) with disposable products soil their professional and respected name.
originally posted on bhphotovideo.com
I am using two of these flashes with a Godox Xpro 2 transmitter, almost always off-camera mounted on light stands bare / in combination with a soft boxe through the Godox S2 bracket. I moved into the Godox system because getting the same flexibility and capability with OEM for my camera system is very expensive. I do own an OEM flash (way more expensive than the TT685CII) and given the flexibility of the Godox, I only use the OEM for on-camera/bounced flash indoors (or when I need a third light in which case I mount the OEM flash onto to the Godox system through the Godox X1 receiver). For everything else, I aways go to these Godox flashes.One more advantage : I also shoot micro-four thirds, and I only needed to get an X2 Pro transmitter for that system. And that ... MoreI am using two of these flashes with a Godox Xpro 2 transmitter, almost always off-camera mounted on light stands bare / in combination with a soft boxe through the Godox S2 bracket. I moved into the Godox system because getting the same flexibility and capability with OEM for my camera system is very expensive. I do own an OEM flash (way more expensive than the TT685CII) and given the flexibility of the Godox, I only use the OEM for on-camera/bounced flash indoors (or when I need a third light in which case I mount the OEM flash onto to the Godox system through the Godox X1 receiver). For everything else, I aways go to these Godox flashes.One more advantage : I also shoot micro-four thirds, and I only needed to get an X2 Pro transmitter for that system. And that enables the same flashes to be used across systems.It doesn't seem like these flashes are weather sealed though. I have also come to realize that there is only so much speedlites like these can be pushed when used in combination with big softboxes (e.g., 34). So I am now looking at the AD 200 Pro / similar as my next flash!
| Guide Number | 196.85' / 60 m at ISO 100 |
| Auto Zoom Head | Yes |
| Bounce Head | -7 to +120° |
| Swivel Head | 330° |
| Recycle Time | Approx. 0.1 to 2.6 Seconds |
Godox TT685IIS
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Godox TT685II-S Flash for Sony, HSS TTL Camera Flash Speedlite, 1/8000s GN60 2.4G X Wireless, 0.1-2.6s Recycle Time, Speedlight Flash with TCM Instant
Free delivery
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Godox TT685S II Flash for Sony Camears Wireless TTL
Delivery $17.45
Godox TT685IIS ( Mark II ) Speed Light Flash Thinklite TTL for Sony
Delivery between 5–10 June $18.97
Godox TT685S II On-Camera Flash (SONY)
Free delivery
The Godox TT685II flash and XPro Trigger make for a very capable system for both on camera and off camera flash. The flash's modes for being optical triggered, for being an on-camera wireless master, and an off camera wireless flash are very good. This is a complicated system that requires a detailed understanding of the system's modes and features. Unfortunately the provided document does not describe enough of the details which can cause much frustration for the user. Thankfully, there videos on YouTube that are essential for getting to know how to use this system.
I have Godox speedlights that are 5+ years old that work great. The latest TT685S II speedlights are absolute trash.I used mine for 2-3 shoots before it snapped while on-camera; the bottom of flash staying in the hotshoe of my A7III, the top half literally falling to the ground with a dramatic explosion of eneloop rechargeables.B&H promptly replaced the item assuming the first to be defective. I used it at a wedding for about an hour before the same exact thing happened on my A7IV.With the new hotshoe-lock design, there's no way to over-tighten these TT685S II. They only have one tightness setting, so there is no way this is due to over-tightening on the hotshoe.B&H is great; they shouldn't let companies like Godox (aka flashpoint, aka whatever) with ... MoreI have Godox speedlights that are 5+ years old that work great. The latest TT685S II speedlights are absolute trash.I used mine for 2-3 shoots before it snapped while on-camera; the bottom of flash staying in the hotshoe of my A7III, the top half literally falling to the ground with a dramatic explosion of eneloop rechargeables.B&H promptly replaced the item assuming the first to be defective. I used it at a wedding for about an hour before the same exact thing happened on my A7IV.With the new hotshoe-lock design, there's no way to over-tighten these TT685S II. They only have one tightness setting, so there is no way this is due to over-tightening on the hotshoe.B&H is great; they shouldn't let companies like Godox (aka flashpoint, aka whatever) with disposable products soil their professional and respected name.
I am using two of these flashes with a Godox Xpro 2 transmitter, almost always off-camera mounted on light stands bare / in combination with a soft boxe through the Godox S2 bracket. I moved into the Godox system because getting the same flexibility and capability with OEM for my camera system is very expensive. I do own an OEM flash (way more expensive than the TT685CII) and given the flexibility of the Godox, I only use the OEM for on-camera/bounced flash indoors (or when I need a third light in which case I mount the OEM flash onto to the Godox system through the Godox X1 receiver). For everything else, I aways go to these Godox flashes.One more advantage : I also shoot micro-four thirds, and I only needed to get an X2 Pro transmitter for that system. And that ... MoreI am using two of these flashes with a Godox Xpro 2 transmitter, almost always off-camera mounted on light stands bare / in combination with a soft boxe through the Godox S2 bracket. I moved into the Godox system because getting the same flexibility and capability with OEM for my camera system is very expensive. I do own an OEM flash (way more expensive than the TT685CII) and given the flexibility of the Godox, I only use the OEM for on-camera/bounced flash indoors (or when I need a third light in which case I mount the OEM flash onto to the Godox system through the Godox X1 receiver). For everything else, I aways go to these Godox flashes.One more advantage : I also shoot micro-four thirds, and I only needed to get an X2 Pro transmitter for that system. And that enables the same flashes to be used across systems.It doesn't seem like these flashes are weather sealed though. I have also come to realize that there is only so much speedlites like these can be pushed when used in combination with big softboxes (e.g., 34). So I am now looking at the AD 200 Pro / similar as my next flash!
I can't say enough good things about this flash. I primarily use if for two situations; outdoors straight on for fill and indoors bounced. It has plenty of power to do those things well. I most always shoot it TTL and I get very accurate exposures. Outdoors I dial the flash one stop down and the results are beautiful. It doesn't look like a flash shot at all, but there are no dark eye sockets and I find it much easier to get beautiful skin tones. Comparing it to my two Nikon flashes I find the TTL, power, build quality and recycle time to be equal. But the Godox is superior in functionality. The Nikon menus compared to Godox are cumbersome and slow. I have three other Godox flashes and sometimes use all four off camera. An inexpensive Godox flash trigger makes it ... MoreI can't say enough good things about this flash. I primarily use if for two situations; outdoors straight on for fill and indoors bounced. It has plenty of power to do those things well. I most always shoot it TTL and I get very accurate exposures. Outdoors I dial the flash one stop down and the results are beautiful. It doesn't look like a flash shot at all, but there are no dark eye sockets and I find it much easier to get beautiful skin tones. Comparing it to my two Nikon flashes I find the TTL, power, build quality and recycle time to be equal. But the Godox is superior in functionality. The Nikon menus compared to Godox are cumbersome and slow. I have three other Godox flashes and sometimes use all four off camera. An inexpensive Godox flash trigger makes it very easy to fully control all four flashes remotely from the camera location. In summary, I'm sold on Godox, even is the cost was equal to Nikon, and its far less, I would still buy the Godox.
This flash is a great unit for any wedding and event photographer. In iTTL mode, it works just like my Nikon SB910. The best part about this flash is that it now has the ability to control other wireless remote flashes within the Godox family of flashes. You no longer need to have an extra XT-2 sender to use other wireless flash units. You can control everything from the TT685N II. This is a wonderful addition to the flash.On the downside, when you're in wireless mode, the Main (M) flash in iTTL mode chronically underexposes the subject. The issue also manifested itself in the older 685N so it must be a design issue. You have to crank up the exposure anywhere from +3 to +1.3 to get a decent result. In regular iTTL mode, this doesn't happen.Overall, this flash is ... MoreThis flash is a great unit for any wedding and event photographer. In iTTL mode, it works just like my Nikon SB910. The best part about this flash is that it now has the ability to control other wireless remote flashes within the Godox family of flashes. You no longer need to have an extra XT-2 sender to use other wireless flash units. You can control everything from the TT685N II. This is a wonderful addition to the flash.On the downside, when you're in wireless mode, the Main (M) flash in iTTL mode chronically underexposes the subject. The issue also manifested itself in the older 685N so it must be a design issue. You have to crank up the exposure anywhere from +3 to +1.3 to get a decent result. In regular iTTL mode, this doesn't happen.Overall, this flash is perfect for most situations as long as you can work around a few of its idiosyncrasies.
Functionally, exactly as described. I'm using it with Panasonic Lumix DC-G9 and G100 bodies, and it is roughly 4 times more powerful that than the Lumix 560L flash I already have. I appreciate the considerably higher flexibility of the flash head, particularly the ability to bounce flash off a wall behind the camera. The adjustable coverage based on the lens focal length provides evenly lit photos, under varied circumstances. All as described and expected, at a fair price.Figuring out all the functionality is a challenge, as the manual is a very small paper pamphlet, with line illustrations and labels in a miniscule font. Even with a hand-held magnifier it is difficult to read. Fortunately, it can be downloaded as a PDF, and then used with the magnifying tool. ... MoreFunctionally, exactly as described. I'm using it with Panasonic Lumix DC-G9 and G100 bodies, and it is roughly 4 times more powerful that than the Lumix 560L flash I already have. I appreciate the considerably higher flexibility of the flash head, particularly the ability to bounce flash off a wall behind the camera. The adjustable coverage based on the lens focal length provides evenly lit photos, under varied circumstances. All as described and expected, at a fair price.Figuring out all the functionality is a challenge, as the manual is a very small paper pamphlet, with line illustrations and labels in a miniscule font. Even with a hand-held magnifier it is difficult to read. Fortunately, it can be downloaded as a PDF, and then used with the magnifying tool. There is also no explanation at which focal length it is necessary to use the flip-down wide angle diffuser; I guess I will find that out by trial and error. (1 star off for the amnual, otherwise I'd give this 5 stars.)I have yet to experiment with using this as the master flash controlling my other two Panasonic Lumix flashes. Radio control might be iffy, but I am certain I can make it work by using the light trigger function on the Panasonics.
I used this flash with my Canon EOS RP (from B&H) at two weddings last weekend. I may not understand the settings yet. I thought I'd be able to get a faster repeated flash. Instead I got some variety because a few un-flashed images turned out interestingly. Others failed. I have been a B&H customer since 1994, when my NYU professor recommended B&H.
It seems like a great solid flash unit. Plenty of power and useful somewhat simple to use menus. The only thing that I don't like so far: The TTL Auto zoom doesn't match the lens zoom setting (sets 35mm for my 25mm lens for example). This causes some vignetting. When I set it to manual zoom and the correct zoom value, it takes care of the vignetting. Not too big a deal, but annoying nonetheless (Hence 4 stars).
Overall, the TT685ii-S seems to be a great flash, but I'm experiencing a problem. When in TTL mode, almost all photos turn out underexposed by 1 to 2 stops. In manual mode, the flash works flawlessly.The flash came with the latest firmware and my camera's firmware is up-to-date as well.I have an older Olympus camera and a Godox TT685-O flash, and all photos taken in TTL mode turn out properly exposed. I've uploaded comparative photos taken with the Olympus vs the Sony so you can see the difference. Camera settings were identical across the board.Reached out to Godox about the issue and they could not come up with a root cause or provide a fix other than to use the exposure compensation to 'dial in' the proper amount of flash if the first image is too dark. But ... MoreOverall, the TT685ii-S seems to be a great flash, but I'm experiencing a problem. When in TTL mode, almost all photos turn out underexposed by 1 to 2 stops. In manual mode, the flash works flawlessly.The flash came with the latest firmware and my camera's firmware is up-to-date as well.I have an older Olympus camera and a Godox TT685-O flash, and all photos taken in TTL mode turn out properly exposed. I've uploaded comparative photos taken with the Olympus vs the Sony so you can see the difference. Camera settings were identical across the board.Reached out to Godox about the issue and they could not come up with a root cause or provide a fix other than to use the exposure compensation to 'dial in' the proper amount of flash if the first image is too dark. But that's not always possible in a run-and-gun photo session where you only have one chance to get the shot.I also spoke with Sony, and they said that third party flashes do not communicate with the Sony cameras in the same consistent manner that a Sony flash does. Just hate the thought of having to pay the much higher price for a Sony flash.Not sure why Godox states that the TT685ii-S is fully compatible with the Sony A7iii camera when the TTL feature does not seem to work reliably.
as to be expected it is a very good flash.Now in regards to the fit with my d5600 hotshoe, although it does work and communicate with the camera it is not a strong and secure fit. even after closing the latch it can be wiggled and pulled off.I tried exchanging it but it's no better.The helpful staff at BH weren't able to help me.is it possible that there is something off with my particular hot shoe? dunno.
| Guide Number | 196.85' / 60 m at ISO 100 |
| Auto Zoom Head | Yes |
| Bounce Head | -7 to +120° |
| Swivel Head | 330° |
| Recycle Time | Approx. 0.1 to 2.6 Seconds |