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Ninja Flame Vs Ninja Assassin

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Ninja flame vs ninja assassin 1. More by: 1Enjoy this legendary screensaver of Celebrity Wars, with upward to 100 images of the best movie of all situations including the soundtracks. Enjoy this legendary screensaver of Celebrity Wars, with upward to 100 images of the greatest film of all periods like the soundtracks.Dimension: 49.0 MB, Cost. Superhero Ninja Arashi with Samurai Assassin Hero Ninja hero warrior is simple yet addicting game play, giving you thrilling moments and an unexpected experience. In this mission, you play as warrior, a former legendary superhero ninja who fight his way through the corrupted world to save his kidnapped son from the hand of the devil Orochi. It's only compatible for Atomos Shogun and Ninja Assassin (Shogun Inferno, Shogun Flame, Ninja Inferno, Ninja Flame, Shogun Studio and other monitors CAN NOT be used on this cage) This device comes with arrays of 1/4'-20 & 3/8'-16 accessories mounting holes for extended functions.

  1. Ninja Assassin 2 The Movie
  2. Ninja Assassin 2009

It's a common enough scenario – if you're shooting outside in bright sunlight it can be a struggle to make out the image on even the best on-camera monitors. And if you can't see what you're shooting then you're obviously at risk of missing focus or getting your exposure wrong. Not ideal.

But Atomos might be about to change all that with their next generation of external 4K recorders. The Flame series builds on the strengths of the original Shogun and Ninja Assassin and adds several significant improvements. The new models are the Ninja Flame (with HDMI) and the Shogun Flame (with HDMI and SDI).

The headline feature is the new high brightness High Dynamic Range capable (HDR) 10-bit display. It has a 1500-nit brightness screen that is bright enough to be used in daylight – addressing one of the major usability issues that hinders every other external recorder I've used. It is also capable of taking a Log image and displaying it in HDR so you can see a vivid image that's easy to focus.

Both monitors feature a calibrated 7' 1920×1200 325ppi IPS panel with 10-bit colour accuracy. They are capable of resolving 1.07 billion colours compared to the 16.7 million colours of traditional 8-bit panels. The majority of TV displays and field monitors are only 8-bit, so even if you're recording a 10-bit image you can't see those extra gradations of colour when it comes to displaying them. There are of course professional displays and 4K/5K iMac screens that are 10-bit, but not everyone has access to these.

Both monitor/recorders are also equipped with what Atomos are calling the AtomHDR engine. By utilising the power of the 1500nit panel in tandem with this new processing engine, you are now able to resolve the brightness detail and colour accuracy of 10-bit HDR images. This means that you can view a HDR image when you are recording, and replicate it in a post work flow if you are required to deliver or master in HDR.

Getting your head around HDR can be a little confusing, but I'll explain more about it further down in the article. For now let's focus on what else is new in the Flame series.

As I mentioned earlier the new display is 1500-nit. To put this in perspective the Atomos Shogun and Assassin are only 400-nit. The only other 7' field monitor I know of that has a brightness of 1500-nit is the SmallHD DP7-Pro High Bright, but that only has an 8-bit 1280×800 resolution screen. You can use the new display in two ways: if you have scenes that call for HDR, activate the AtomHDR mode. If you don't, switch to High Bright mode for outdoor monitoring without needing a sun hood. The thing to be aware of is that the image will look different depending on which mode you are in and you will probably still need to use a sunhood in HDR mode. Newsshooter has seen the new screen and we were very impressed by what we saw.

One of the main complaints that users had about the Shogun and Assassin was build quality. Atomos have addressed this and the new Shogun and Ninja Flame come with rugged built-in armour protection, feeling a lot more sturdy as a result. The screen is now much better protected against knocks from the side. This new re-design has also made the screen less vulnerable to braking. The downside of this better build quality is that the new monitor/recorders are heavier than before. The new Shogun weighs 1094g (38.6oz) with batteries and media. The Ninja Assassin is 1064g (37.5oz) in the same configuration. A lot of people praised the lightness of the original Ninja Assassin, and may not be fans of the increased weight. Personally I welcome it, as I would much rather have better build quality when it comes to a external recorder/monitor than something that is lighter but more fragile.

The other welcome addition is that both models can now take twin batteries instead of the single battery that could be used on the Shogun and Assassin. I was very critical of the battery performance on the Shogun when I first tested it and to their credit Atomos did start shipping the Shogun with a larger battery. It is good to see that they have now gone a step further and included twin battery support. This also gives you the ability to hot swap batteries so you never have to power the unit down. There is also a new battery charger that Atomos claim will charge the batteries 3x faster.

As far as recording options go, the Shogun and Ninja flame feature all the same capabilities of the original Shogun and Ninja Assassin. Both units record 4K/HD direct from the sensor to 10-bit 4:2:2 Apple ProRes or AVID DNxHR/DNxHD. You can record 4K UHD (up to 30p) or record high frame rate HD (up to 120p). There is also Raw to ProRes/DNxHR recording for select Sony and Canon cameras.

There are still no mapped hardware buttons and both units still rely heavily on the touchscreen controls and AtomOS user interface. One thing to note is that the waveform and scopes when your in the HDR mode only display the HDR image info, you can't set it to show the scopes for the log image while Viewing the HDR.

The Ninja Flame is a HDMI only model with all of the above features and ships with accessories including a HRPC hard case, a snap-fast HDR sunhood, fast battery charger, control cable, 2 x NP-F750 4 cell batteries, USB 3 Docking Station, D-Tap Cable, 5 x Master Caddy Cases and a 12 V 3A AC-DC Power Adapter. MSRP is US $1295

The Shogun Flame is an HDMI & SDI model with bi-directional SDI/HDMI conversion, Raw to ProRes/DNxHR recording for select Sony and Canon cameras, balanced XLR audio input/output and LTC/Genlock connectivity. It features the same accessories as the Ninja Flame as well as an XLR breakout cable for an MSRP of $1695.

I spoke to Atomos CEO Jeromy Young about the new Shogun and Ninja Flame, and you can listen to that interview below.

'HDR is simply amazing, it's the next revolution for filmmaking. Once again Atomos are first with the technical solution to make it quicker, easier and more affordable for filmmakers,' says Atomos CEO and co-founder Jeromy Young. 'Anyone that sees HDR, from content creators to consumers are immediately sold, – more life like shots and real world detail. Our job is to open up HDR to all filmmakers by removing the technical and affordability hurdles that might slow its progress.'

HDR
With existing Rec.709 monitors we are limited to 100 nits or roughly 6.6 stops and so to be able to realise the capabilities of the Log image you'll need to have a monitor that can display more of the brightness range. UHD Premium specifies this should really be over 1000nits but along with that you'll need to have some processing that understands the specific ‘recipe' for the Log curve you're working with.

This is where the AtomHDR engine provides an evolutionary step in on-set monitoring. It offers the 1500nits of brightness that gives you the ability to view just over 10 stops of dynamic range, and also provides 10-bit colour processing that allows you to see realistic bright and vibrant colour as apposed to the low contrast desaturated tones of Log.

By using the AtomHDR engine on the Atomos Flame series you can correctly expose for HDR without rules of thumb or exposure charts. The luma parade waveform shows the expanded dynamic range allowing you to see all the points of detail, and keeps the highlights from clipping. At the same time as providing on camera HDR monitoring the highbright 1500nit display also provides easy daylight viewing for SDR (Standard Dynamic Range). Simply switching between the the modes will allow you to see the SDR exposure which is typically a couple of stops under exposed, but with the the 10bit 4:2:2 recording you'll have the overhead to expand this out in post. In SDR mode you can also quickly switch between LUTs to preview any filmstock or stylised looks you want.

As AtomHDR is a monitoring-only function, it's completely non-destructive to the Log footage. As such you'll be able to go into the post process with your footage unchanged. The HDR image that you are seeing on the Flame series can't be hooked up and displayed on a HDR TV. The Flame series does not output the correct metadata flags for it to work.

Dedicated HDR tools are emerging within the likes of Adobe Premier Pro and Avid Media composer, and other NLE systems are set to follow. In terms of editorial you'll be able to make the exact same edits as you would when working in SDR. Adobe has tools such as HDR to SDR conversion, and Nit scales on Luma wave forms that are already in place to help edit for HDR distribution. AtomOS also provides the ability to start to prepare rushes for the edit by marking in and out points and cut tags. It also allows you to mark timecode based metadata tags that can all be used to export an EDL in XML format, that can be imported with the content to save time on clip wrangling. In an HDR workflow as with many other existing workflows it's also perfectly acceptable to use offline proxy and then reconform to the RAW or high resolution files via XML or AAF for the colour grading process.

The new Flame series looks to have set the bar quite high for a field monitor, let alone one that also records. If the 1500nit and 10-bit display weren't already enough, the addition of the AtomHDR engine was quite a surprise. Atomos have been working to develop the next phase of their product to be able to facilitate the needs of SDR productions but also be able to provide a new generation of tools for producing HDR content. From my perspective I think it is a good move, despite HDR being still very much in its infancy: Atomos are betting on widespread HDR adoption, and by adding monitoring support for it in the Shogun Flame and Ninja Flame they are creating products that are likely to have a longer lifespan than some of their competitors.

Flame series key features from Atomos:
• With a Dynamic range to match that of a 10-bit camera Log footage, AtomHDR monitors deliver the detail in highlights and shadows usually clipped on traditional monitors.
• A highly advanced field monitor even in non-HDR scenarios with 1500nits brightness for outdoor shooting, native full HD resolution and optional calibration to ensure natural LCD colour drift can be corrected over time.
• Record direct from the sensor in 4K UHD (up to 30p) or record high frame rate HD (up to 120p)
• Along with recording the high pixel density of 4K, the Ninja and Shogun Flame also record higher resolution 10-bit colour information and more precise yet efficient 4:2:2 colour encoding.
• Recording to Apple ProRes and AVID DNxHR visually lossless edit-ready codecs ensure you capture full individual frames like film, providing more flexibility and creativity in post. Can be delivered to any standard – never worry about having your footage technically rejected due to the format again.
• Ready for real-word conditions with built-in armour protection, dual battery hot-swappable continuous power system to ensure you always have power and a raft of included accessories including a new fast charger and snap-fast sun hood.
• Our patented hot-swappable dual battery system for continuous power is backed up with the included power accessories (2 x 4-cell batteries, D-Tap adaptor and blazingly fast battery charger)
• An arsenal of creative weapons including focus and exposure tools, 3D Custom Looks, Waveforms (LUMA and RGB) and Vector Scopes ensure you set the shot up perfectly every time.
• XLR audio via breakout cables for Shogun Flame or 3.5mm line level input with audio delay, level adjustment and dedicated audio meters with channel selection for Ninja Flame.
• Use affordable, readily available SSDs from the world's most trusted media brands.

The Flame Series is shipping (March 28th) for a MSRP of:

Shogun Flame
US: $ 1,695 ex. TAX
EU: € 1,695 ex. VAT
GBP: £ 1,295 ex. VAT
AUD: $ 2,695 Inc. GST
Ninja Flame
US: $ 1,295 ex. TAX
EU: € 1,295 ex. VAT
GBP: £ 995 ex. VAT
AUD: $ 2,049 Inc. GST

Camera Log (S-Log2, S-Log3, C-Log, V-Log etc) delivers maximum sensor detail in your recordings, but on monitors it looks washed out & makes judging exposure difficult. The compromise for filmmakers is to use LUT's to get the approximate 'look' but sacrifice detail or use calibration cards, waveform & some 'rule of thumb' figures to set exposure correctly. AtomHDR is the solution, accurately displaying HDR Log footage with the brightness to see Log as the eye sees it.

Scenes ignite with 1500NITS of light

Not all scenes call for HDR Log recording. In situations that don't call for 10 stops of dynamic range, use the intensity of the 1500nit panel to monitor traditional standard dynamic range (SDR/Rec709) video at high brightness for outdoor monitoring..

Simply pick the right mode, HDR or High Bright SDR, and get busy setting up your shot on the premium 7' display boasting 10-bit processing, 1920x1200 resolution, 325ppi pixel density, optional calibration to overcome natural LCD color drift and an arsenal of precision video setup tools for perfect shots every time.

Get more from your DSLR

The perfect partner for DSLR and Mirrorless cameras with Log output over HDMI. From gimbal operators to Corporate to Indy filmmakers, your recordings are instantly upgraded to the defacto standard for Hollywood, Indie & Broadcasters (ProRes and DNxHR), ensuring you're not technically rejected in Post and letting you see the detail of your camera's Log on set with natural colors on the calibrated 7' AtomHDR High Bright monitor.

Affordable, reliable media

Ninja Assassin 2 The Movie

The combination of high capacity media with recording direct from the sensor means that the conventional 30min barrier imposed by many cameras can be bypassed..

Record professional 4K & HD

Recording 4K and high frame rate HD within the camera might seem enough but unless you record with the right codec you're restricting flexibility in post and even run the risk of having your footage technically rejected. Along with the high pixel density of 4K, the Ninja Flame records higher resolution 10-bit color information, more precise yet efficient 4:2:2 color encoding and to visually lossless, edit-ready codecs like Apple ProRes or AVID DNxHR.

Now you're recording professionally, capturing full individual frames just like film and opening up more creativity in post and grading. Additionally, bypassing internal recording also bypasses the 30min recording barrier found on many Mirrorless/DSLR cameras

Simple OS, Sophisticated Shots

Our flexible OS is packed with an extensive suite of scopes, all 1-touch away and simple to use. The Video OS includes tools for focus, framing & exposure (Focus peaking, 2:1/1:1 zoom, Zebra, False Color, Frame guides, SMPTE Safe Area, Waveform, RGB parade, vectorscope) along with a flexible 3D LUT implementation (use built-in LOG to Rec.709 Video or upload .cube files) and options for anamorphic de-squeeze monitoring.

Click on the icons to preview AtomOS

  • Focus Peaking

  • 2:1 Zoom

  • Zebra

  • False Color

  • Safe Area

  • Luma Parade

  • RGB Parade

  • Vectorscope

Continuous power is back... with super fast charging

Our patented continuous power system pioneered on our HD products are back on the 4K range. The hot swappable dual battery system that automatically swaps to the second battery when power is low, coupled with the blazingly fast battery charger and dual 4-cell batteries (optional accessories) means that continuous power in the field is all but assured.

Advanced DSLR audio monitoring

Record audio as well as video externally on the Ninja Flame. Monitor up to 8ch of HDMI audio or 2ch analog line in on the dedicated audio meters, all locked frame accurate with adjustment for frame delay, gain adjustment and Mic level adjustment when using external microphones (3.5mm unbalanced input).

Advanced recording capability

Outside of 10-bit 4:2:2 ProRes/DNx, the Ninja Flame adds recording functionality not found in other recorders. Trigger start/stop recording over HDMI from select Canon, Sony, Panasonic, Nikon cameras. Convert interlace video from your camera to progressive on the fly with built-in 3:2 and 2:2 pulldown and gain advanced functionality like Pre-roll (continuous cache recording to never miss the action) and Time lapse to maximise your creativity.

Battle-Ready!

For the field

Our built-in armor enhances protection & airflow whilst the raft of accessories (2 x NP series 4-cell batteries, fast battery charger, USB3 docking station, XLR breakout cable, Lanc cable, DC to D-Tap cable, 5 x Master Caddy cases, DC adapter & HDR sun hood) and the premium HPRC flight case ensures you're ready to hit the field immediately.


POWER KIT
$149

'I am confident that AtomHDR will be the new monitoring standard among productions of all scales'

Tesla

The Tesla Shoot:

Cloakroom Media & Flying Dragon Aerial teamed up on a TVC production for Tesla Motors Australia. We were given two production days to complete the filming and put together some cutting edge kit to film from the land and the skies (a pair of Freefly Systems ALTA's coupled with MoVI M15's, a Freefly Systems TERO and RED Epic Dragon on both ALTA's to decrease setup times between each sequence). We were delighted to be invited to test out two pre release products labelled the Atomos Ninja Flame & Shogun Flame.

Ninja

'When we heard about the new AtomHDR feature we had no idea how much detail you would be able to see until we shot with it ourselves'

Abandon Visual

Ninja Flame on the Movi M5:

The Ninja Flame basically lives on our Movi M5 as it is a little lighter than the Shogun Flame but still retains the features we have come so accustomed to. We are able to see exactly what we are shooting and with the ability to flip the image able to move the monitor any which way and still see the shot we want. Focus assist is a feature that is never disabled. It is an absolute life saver and the best part is the ability to change the color of the focus peaking. Usually we have the focus peaking on red but when we were shooting the red car for the launch video red blended in with the car so we switched it to Blue so it stood out a bit more.

The focus peaking feels extremely refined and always does an outstanding job showing clearly what's in focus and what's not. This is essential when shooting gimbal as we can't have a lens that is set to infinite focus and trust that everything is in focus. Paired with the focus assist we also are able to use the 2:1 feature to make sure the focus is in fact set perfectly. Wave form is another feature that we utilize as it is very accurate, highly detailed and ensures that we are getting perfect exposure. This is especially important on the gimbal as the shot is very wide and we need to retain full dynamic range. When we heard about the new AtomHDR feature we had no idea how much detail you would be able to see until we shot with it ourselves. It was truly amazing to view how much detail we could pull back in the shadows and highlights before we had even played with the image in post.

Ninja flame vs ninja assassin 2

'When we heard about the new AtomHDR feature we had no idea how much detail you would be able to see until we shot with it ourselves'

Abandon Visual

Ninja Flame on the Movi M5:

The Ninja Flame basically lives on our Movi M5 as it is a little lighter than the Shogun Flame but still retains the features we have come so accustomed to. We are able to see exactly what we are shooting and with the ability to flip the image able to move the monitor any which way and still see the shot we want. Focus assist is a feature that is never disabled. It is an absolute life saver and the best part is the ability to change the color of the focus peaking. Usually we have the focus peaking on red but when we were shooting the red car for the launch video red blended in with the car so we switched it to Blue so it stood out a bit more.

The focus peaking feels extremely refined and always does an outstanding job showing clearly what's in focus and what's not. This is essential when shooting gimbal as we can't have a lens that is set to infinite focus and trust that everything is in focus. Paired with the focus assist we also are able to use the 2:1 feature to make sure the focus is in fact set perfectly. Wave form is another feature that we utilize as it is very accurate, highly detailed and ensures that we are getting perfect exposure. This is especially important on the gimbal as the shot is very wide and we need to retain full dynamic range. When we heard about the new AtomHDR feature we had no idea how much detail you would be able to see until we shot with it ourselves. It was truly amazing to view how much detail we could pull back in the shadows and highlights before we had even played with the image in post.

Perfect For

Corporate Video

Ninja Flame is the perfect all-in-one workhorse for corporate filmmakers, combining a high resolution color calibrated & daylight viewable monitor (1500nits) with a high quality recorder that eliminates limits on record time and bypasses the use of low capacity media. The external audio input with level control also allows you add an additional DSLR powered mic that can be monitored on board the Ninja Flame.

Wedding DSLR

Keep your DSLR kit compact without compromising a professional result. The 1500nit panel is great for hood-free outdoor monitoring, sunsets never looked better for clients on the AtomHDR 10-bit monitor, shoot longer with the continuous power system & the entire workflow is streamlined by recording direct to ProRes/DNxHR for better results in grading & less time spent transcoding.

Gimbals & Drones

Ditch the hood on your gimbal with the 7' high brightness 1500nit panel, use the onboard focus peaking & waveform tools and simply concentrate on framing the scene perfectly. Hit record with out disturbing camera balance and capture Apple ProRes or Avid DNxHR 4K/HD to bypass the heavy codec compression of small cameras that suit Gimbals for balance but compromise recording quality.

Weight
Without batteries & media620g / 21.9oz
With batteries & media1064g / 37.5oz
Dimensions (W x H x D mm)214 x 127 x 45mm, 8.4 x 5 x 1.8'
ConstructionHigh quality lightweight ABS Polycarbonate for durability & portability
Built-in armor protection
Power
Operating power10 - 24W
Compatible batteriesNP-F series and supporting accessories
Input voltage (battery)6.2V to 16.8V
Battery time (based on 2 x 7.4V batteries)-
5200mAh - up to 1.5hrs (monitor & record 4K 30p)
7800mAh - up to 2.2hrs (monitor & record 4K 30p)
DC In1 x DC in (6.2 - 16.8V)
Continuous power
* Patent pending
Primary-secondary battery system Change batteries without losing power Loop batteries continuously
Touchscreen
Size7.1'
Resolution1920 x 1200
PPI325
Aspect ratio16:9 native
Color GamutREC709 HDTV
Look up table (LUT) support3D LUT (.cube le format)
Anamorphic de-squeeze2x, 1.5x, 1.33x, Panasonic 8:3
TechnologySuperAtom IPS panel (capacitive touch), calibration to Rec.709 with optional calibration unit
HDR
AtomHDRYes
Supported Log formatsSony SLog2 / SLog3, Canon CLog / CLog 2, Arri Log C,
Panasonic Vlog, JVC JLog, Red LogFilm, FujiFilm Flog
Supported GamutsSony SGamut / SGamut3 / SGamut3.cine
Canon Cinema / BT2020 / DCI P3 / DCI P3+
Panasonic V Gamut
Arri Alexa Wide Gamut
Bit depth10-bit (8+2 FRC)
Brightness1500nit (+/- 10% @ center)
HDR input (PQ/HLG)
HDR output (PQ/HLG)
Yes / Yes
Yes / Yes
Video input/loop out
HDMI1 x HDMI (1.4b)
SDI-
SignalUncompressed true 10-bit or 8-bit 422
(camera dependent)
Video output (play out)
HDMI1 x HDMI (1.4b)
SDI-
SignalUncompressed true 10-bit or 8-bit 422
(playback file dependent)
Supported loop out formats
HDMI to HDMI720p 50/60, 1080i 50/60,
1080p 24/25/30/50/60/120,
2160p 24/25/30
SDI to SDI
Video signal conversion
HDMI to SDI
SDI to HDMI
Supported Codecs & frame rates (record & playback)
Raw to CDNG (Record only)*N/A
Raw to ProRes / DNxHRN/A
Video to ProRes / DNxHRCodecs Apple ProRes HQ, 422, LT
AVID DNxHR HQX. HQ, SQ, LB
Frame rates 4K UHD; 24/25/30
1080p; 24/SF24/25/SF25/30/SF30/50/60/100/120
1080i; 50/60i
720p; 50/60p
Onboard processing
Pulldown removal24/25/30pSF > 24/25/30p (2:2 pulldown)
60i > 24p (3:2 pulldown)
4K UHD downscale for HD monitoringYes - Loop-out and playback

Ninja Assassin 2009

Audio in/out (48kHz PCM audio)
HDMI2 or 8ch 24-bit, camera dependent
SDI-
AudioLine in / Mic in / Headphone out 2ch 48kHz 24-bit
Remote start/stop
HDMIAuto HDMI Trigger
Supported Protocols - Canon, Sony, Atomos Open Standard
SDI-
OtherLANC control - Slave
Playback
Playlist / Genlock / LTCYes / No / No
CDNG (Recorded content)N/A
ProRes (Recorded content)All recorded files can playback. Playback in slow motion >= 100fps
DNxHR / DNxHD (recorded content)All recorded files can playback. Playback in slow motion >= 100fps
Recording
Pre-roll recordYes (HD 8s, 4K 2s)
Custom timelapseYes
Meta data taggingYes (10 tags available)
Supported media2.5' SSD/HDD compatibility depends on recording format, resolution and frame rate. Visit atomos.com/drives for list of tested and approved drives
Master caddy caseMaster Caddy II (included)
75mm x 105mm x 12mm
Master caddy dock2.5' SATA to USB 2.0/3.0
Supported applicationsFCPX/FCP7+ / Media Composer
5.0+ / Premiere 5.5+
EDIUS 6.0+ / Vegas Pro 10+ / Lightworks /
Autodesk Smoke 2015
XML supportFCPX XML native, FCP7 supported with
conversion (Adobe compatible)
Accessories includedNinja Flame unit, Master Caddy II x 1,
12V-3A AC power supply
Optional extrasAccessory Kit: 2 x battery, 1 x charger,
1 x power supply, HPRC case, USB dock, control cable,
Dtap cable, Master Caddy x 4, Power supply, Sun hood
Power Kit: 2 x battery, 1 x charger,
1 x power supply
Other: Atomos HDMI cable,
X-Rite i1DisplayPro calibration

All specifications correct when published, subject to E&OE.

* Available in future firmware updates

Ninja Flame Firmware

Ninja Flame Firmware V7.2

Update Atom OS to take advantage of the latest features for the best possible experience.
Firmware Update Procedure

Please ensure unit is plugged into mains power before commencing firmware update

  • Previous firmware version
Ninja Flame Resources

User Manual

Ninja Flame Product Brochure

HDR Tech-guide

Recommended Drives

Supported Cameras





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