The Voyagers are also waterproof, it's one of the main selling points and (sadly) the reason for the lack of direct controls. I used them in some hazardous situations near/in water where i don't want risk tu use my Nanlites (way more user friendly, you got the point)... Nice review through, thanks !
Excellent video! Thank for posting I was just looking for a video like this and you definitely added the bonus of adding the Voyager in the mix to compare and contrast each one! Thanks and keep the videos coming!!!
Thank you for doing this review! I've been thinking about Nanlites months, but havn't found of ton of info out there. I think this helped sway my decision.
Hi Rubidium, I was wondering if you had the chance to try the Falcon Eyes "Irisa". It seems like it out specs the "Pavos" within the same price range.. Cheers
All of the lights on the AsteraBox flash on for 5 seconds then off for 5 seconds until the box dies, that is it's only function, do you know what is wrong with it?
I went with Quasar T8s and gel sleeves. A whole lot cheaper: $70 for the light and $13-20 per colored gel. Also, the color rendering is better. I don't need the functionality of every single color, wireless control or fun patterns across a wall. I'll eventually pick up the fancy RGB ones when the price comes way down.
@@JamesLightner B&H and Adorama. They didn't have many in stock, they had to special order. Some colors were super delayed and I had to buy >$100 4' x 25' rolls. Luckily, I expensed it.
Voyagers are absolutely useless. Had four of them from backing the Kickstarter, and between the finnicky app, the terrible connectivity/syncing process and the complete lack of light output, they were about as functional as a paperweight
I've used Asteras on 20-30 sets over the past few years. Completely amazing light but completely unreliable. Pavotubes are really good for the cost but don't compare quality-wise to Asteras. The Voyager is one of the worst products ever made. DS really dropped the ball here.