







Product description



1 Refined Optics
2 Precise TTL and HSS
3 High-Performance Battery


1 16 Groups, 16 Colors
2 One Tap Sync
3 Clear/Intuitive Controls

1 Compact and Portable
2 Rich features
3 Diverse Accessories
4 What’s Inside
Godox AD100Pro II accessories, Enrich Your Arsenal
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Customer Reviews
4.8 out of 5 stars 92
4.6 out of 5 stars 455
4.6 out of 5 stars 92
4.5 out of 5 stars 219
4.6 out of 5 stars 147
4.8 out of 5 stars 491
4.7 out of 5 stars 127
Price
$25.00$25.00
$49.00$49.00
$26.90$26.90
$7.90$7.90
$99.00$99.00
$25.00$25.00
$15.90$15.90
Model
S3
AK-R1
AK-R22
AK-R11
X3 Pro S
S2
FG-100
Name
Flash Bracket
Accessories Kit
Dome Diffuser
Dome Diffuser
Flash Trigger
Flash Bracket
Flash Grip
Brand
GODOX
GODOX
GODOX
GODOX
GODOX
GODOX
GODOX
Suitable for AD100ProII
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
Available
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
✔
How to Use
Direct Mount
Direct Mount
Direct Mount
Direct Mount
Wireless Connection/Hot Shoe
Direct Mount
Direct Mount
Lightweight and Portable: Godox AD100Pro II features a cylindrical body design, making it more compact and easier to carry. The entire unit, including the battery, weighs only 564g, effectively reducing the burden during outdoor shoots. It can easily fit into a pocket or camera bag, meeting photographers’ needs for a lightweight off-camera flash and making the shooting process more effortless and efficient
Enhanced 100Ws Stable Output: AD100ProII provides a stable 100Ws of professional flash power, with an upgraded cooling structure that can support approximately 60–100 full-power continuous flashes. Under 85mm focal length conditions, the maximum number of full-power continuous flashes can reach about 100, providing stable and lasting performance for high-intensity shooting
Precise TTL and HSS: Supports full TTL compatibility, enables precise automatic exposure, features high-speed sync up to 1/8000s, and supports front-curtain/rear-curtain sync; power range from 1/256 to 1/1, with 0.1-step fine adjustment for more accurate exposure control
Multifunctional Wireless Control: Built-in Godox 2.4GHz X wireless system, allowing quick synchronization with X3/X3 Pro series triggers for use with major camera brands; also supports 433MHz control via USB-C connection to the FT433 receiver (sold separately), significantly improving lighting efficiency
Lithium Battery with Long-Lasting Endurance: Built-in ultra-large 2850mAh lithium battery, fully charged can provide up to 490 full-power flashes, with a recharge time of 0.01-1.5 seconds. It also features a new USB-C charging port, ensuring more convenient charging, allowing you to focus on photography and enhance your shooting experience
Expand Versatility: The AD100ProII features a built-in circular magnetic flash head, compatible with various GODOX round head accessories to achieve all desired lighting effects. With the quick-install magnetic AK-R11 accessory set (sold separately), it allows for fast and versatile lighting modification. By mounting it on the S3 flash bracket (sold separately), it can accommodate various Bowen mount accessories, providing extensive creative possibilities for your photography
2 reviews for Godox AD100 Pro II AD100ProII Pocket Flash Strobe, 100Ws 2.4G TTL Strobe Light HSS 1/8000s, One-Touch Sync with X3/X3Pro, 2850mAh Li-ion Battery, 490 Full Power Flashes, 10 Brightness Levels
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$299.00
The Broketographers –
It’s a 100ws Coke can, with one very welcome surprise
I’ll be upfront: I own a Profoto A2 and love it. It’s beautifully built, Clic modifiers are great (minus the Profoto tax), and its consistency makes for less work in post. It also costs roughly 4x whatever the AD100 Pro II retails for. So when I discovered that my Profoto Clic modifiers snap cleanly onto the AD100 Pro II’s magnetic head like they were designed for it, I had a moment of quiet financial reckoning.At $299, the AD100 Pro II is asking you to take Godox seriously as a primary flash in the right situations — not just a budget light you toss in the bag — even though it’s fully capable of run & gun styles of photography — in fact, it excels at it due to its small size. And so, the case is stronger than you might expect. It delivers 100ws (which is better than any speedlight), a battery capable of 400-500 full-power pops per charge, and a quick 1.5 second recycle time. That recycle time at full power is genuinely fast for this class of flashes.If you’re already running Godox’s X system (I’ve been testing the X3 and X3 Pro for a while) the one-touch sync lives up to its name. Press once, it’s paired, move on. You get 32 channels and 16 groups with color-coded LED indicators on the head itself, which doesn’t sound like a big deal until you realize how handy it is to be able to tell them apart at a glance when you inevitably forget how they were placed.HSS up to 1/8000s is present and accounted for, which matters when you’re shooting wide open midday and need to drag the ambient down without having to stack ND filters. The 28–85mm zoom range surprised me for a unit this compact — at the tight end, the beam gets noticeably directional, giving you some natural control over spill before you even reach for modifiers. This type of spread control isn’t built into the Profoto A2, so that’s +1 for Godox here.Modifiers: the AD100 Pro II uses a circular magnetic flash head, and the diameter happens to be compatible with Profoto’s Clic system. My Clic dome, softboxes, snoot, gels, Magnum, and Fresnel all mount and hold on pretty strong. If you’ve invested in Profoto’s ecosystem, being able to have a (much cheaper) backup flash that accepts Clic modifiers natively is worth knowing.Compared directly to the A2, the AD100 Pro II gives up ground in build and refinement — the housing is matte plastic where the A2 has a more premium, “professional” aesthetic and feel, but the A2 costs 4x as much, and Godox isn’t pretending to compete on those terms. It’s competing on capability per dollar, and it wins that fight decisively. The S3 bracket (sold separately) adds Bowens-mount compatibility for larger modifiers (similar to Profoto’s OCF adapter), and USB-C charging means less cables and chargers.If you’re already in the Godox ecosystem and want a capable travel strobe that earns its keep on real shoots, the AD100 Pro II is an easy and enthusiastic yes. If you’re a Profoto die-hard with Clic modifiers and want a much, much less expensive backup, this is also for you.
Matt –
Super portable, Super cool, Super cooled
Godox AD lineup of flashes market themselves as outdoor flashes, and while you should not use these in rainy conditions (they aren’t water proof) they are battery powered, and provide ample cooling to keep operating under pressing summer conditions. The AD100 PRO II is a prime example. While a tiny ultra portable unit that’s a little larger than a can of Chunky soup, there are two vents on the back and a fan on the bottom to keep the air moving while on a photo shoot. This would seriously outperform an on-camera flash of the same wattage, but without cooling.Keep in mind, 100w isn’t a whole lot. However, if your primarily shooting in the shade, using as a hair light, or just need to be light weight to hike into a very remote shooting location, this strobe is your friend. The case is nice for long term storage, but wrap is in a magic cloth and toss it in a bag to take up the least space possible. This has worked out nicely for me. Due to the light weight, you have many more mounting options as well. Lighter weight tripods will hold this no problem.You will need to trigger this unit with something. I use the X3 Pro, or the V1 if I’m pairing with my on camera flash. The unit triggers and fire flawlessly.A big selling point for this (to me) is the shared accessories with the V1 lineup. The AD100 comes with a magnetic ring on the front, so you can attach anything in the AK-R1 kit to it (which I’d highly recommend). Gels, barn doors, a grid, it’s all as easy as a magnetic connection to the front.A few draw backs, if you’ve used other off camera flash units….1. This will struggle with large modifiers, it just doesn’t have a lot of power for that. In a small rectangular softbox as a hair light indoors for a portrait? Sure. But outside, not gonna work.2. It fits in the S3 bracket, you’ll need something like this if you do want to use it with a softbox. Though the provided mount is metal, solid, and supports connecting an umbrella3. The menu system is trimmed down a bit. I was surprised that the menu does not have as many setting options as my AD200 and 400. You can adjust minimum power, for example. Not a deal breaker, I guess you shouldn’t really go lower than 1/256 on a 100w light anyway. It does support HSS (if your camera supports it, many Canon’s don’t), Multi mode, and TTL in addition to Manual.The unit has a few other nice touches, like a little tag on the case stating the unit size. Color coded LEDs depending on the flash channel (which cannot be disabled), a battery that is directly USB-C rechargeable (Sweet!), option for a modeling lamp, and an included spigot mount.I can see on the bottom that there are two 1/4″ threads, both appearing to be brass. The mounts appears to be held in by 3 screws. This is not a concern, just wondering if Godox is planning some other mounting options….Great little pocket flash. It competes at a tough price point though. Spend a few more bucks and get a flash that’s twice as powerful, or, an on camera flash with the same amount of power. To that I would say this… Would I recommend this as a first flash? No. But if you do a lot of on-the-go photography, spontaneous photography, hiking photography, or other photography where staying lightweight is important, this is the guy to use. Using large on camera flashes gets burdensome, and trying to use a 300 or 400w for everything requires bigger and heavier stands. It’s not just the flash you need to think about, but the mounting options. I can mount this flash to much lighter weight tripods, and be confident that it’s not going to tip, blow over, or become unstable.Hope this helps someone in their flash purchasing decision. I am not disappointed with the quality in anyway, just know your use case and how this will fit into it. It’s a great performer.