litepanel micro lite for A1
Has anybody used the little micro lite (4 battery version) on the top of their camera with good results?
http://www.vistek.ca/store/ProVideoL...icro-lite.aspx Any idea if it's worth getting for the A1 or is the light more for the smaller cameras? Trish |
Hey Trish
Im an XL2 user (soon to be a XH A1 user) and i've used the microlite by litepanel, but I own the Swit LED by varizoom. With these LEDs you won't get a far throw on it but for close range its awesome also the length of use is very good. The pros are (according to me): double AA batteries so if you ever switch cameras you can keep using those batteries (you can purchase rechargeable ones). They come with gels also, tungsten is one. Not heavy. No cables running. Cons: Plastic body (gotta be gentle with it). Light throw range is not far. Kind of wobbly at times. Those are all the things i can think of at the moment but for the price and for run and gun (close ups) its not a bad choice. Good luck with your choice. |
See the discussion at http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/showthread.php?t=124309
I have a post to some video I shot with the A1 with a lite panel micro |
Thanks everyone, for the info.
I'll check that video out now. trish |
I have the Micro and love it- light weight, AA Batteries, long runtime, great 56k colour temperature, dimmer. Some of the cons, the mount is really flimsy for the money that the unit costs (it wiggles atop my shoe mount and I am always afraid that I'll hit something with it and it will break off), the filter holder for the coloured filters and diffuser is totally useless and always falls off.
I also posted a short video of a line dance demonstration inside. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qqe5Kfy87Ho |
Maybe it's me, but it's just too spotty for 16x9 for my eyes. When I first used the A1 I had a Frezzi mini fill dimmer with a 40 degree wide lamp & while it's always been fine for 4x3 SD, I had to frantically search for something that's even throughout the 16x9 frame and came across a MR16 lamp at Lamps Plus... a Sylvania 60 degree beam spread. No more spotty's or hot spots.
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do you have a model that runs on light weight batteries or does it need the big belt?
trish |
The Frezzi needs a 12v power source. If you want to keep it lightweight all around (keeping weight down on the light & your waist) get one with a 4 pin xlr connector, hop on B&H's site & search for the latest NP1 style batteries. You can get a pouch the NP1's sit in that have an NP adapter that rests in the bottom of the pouch. Very lightweight
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Quote:
Do I love it .... NO. Do I like it....YES. Do I want to keep it....YES. |
i dont recommend the litlepanels i buy the swit 2000C that is wonderful and the price not is different, and the construction y very hard not plastic, buy one forget the littlepanel is very poor for the price, im sorry with my english is limited,
bye |
I have to say I'm a little disappointed with my LP Micro, but it's my first on-camera light (swore I'd never buy one!) so I have nothing to compare it too. I had it on full blast and even from 3-4 feet away much of the footage I shot was unusable.
That said, I was shooting black people with particularly dark skin tones in an exceptionally dark basement room, so perhaps I was simply expecting too much from it. As a couple of other people have mentioned, it's useful as a fill light, nice and light (there is a reason for the flimsy plastic!), and with the AA's you'll never have a battery crisis. I regret not buying something more powerful first and then maybe bought the LP Micro to use on more brightly lit jobs. |
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