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-   -   Smooth Shooter balancing (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/stabilizers-steadicam-etc/82314-smooth-shooter-balancing.html)

John Moon December 22nd, 2006 08:21 AM

Smooth Shooter balancing
 
This is probably a "Duh" questions but here it goes. Do you still have to balance all of the axis if you use a Smooth Shooter? I have a glidecam pod and it takes quite a bit of time to balance. Wondering if the Smooth Shooter eliminates at least part of the balance act???
Thanks,
John

Terry Thompson December 22nd, 2006 06:41 PM

John,

This is an easy answer. YES!

The only thing the Smooth Shooter does is take the weight off your arm and put it onto your body. The sled still needs to be balanced in order to provide proper stabilization.

The BIG plus you will notice immediately is that you can concentrate on your framing and camera movement instead of thinking about how to finish the shot quickly because your arm is killing you.

Enjoy the new world of camera stabilization.

Terry
Indicam

John Moon December 22nd, 2006 09:52 PM

Thanks, I thought that was going to be the case. I just wish there was a way to go from tripod to steadicam quickly without all the work in getting the thing balanced again. I am still thinking of getting the Smooth Shooter.

John

Sean Seah December 23rd, 2006 12:37 AM

John, u could attach a quick release plate. Just balance the glidecam with the release plate n presto! U can remove the cam n r attach it without rebalancing too much. Of cse, u have to ensure the cam is in the same state as when it was balanced, eg: LCD flipped open, mic blah blah.. I use Terry's indicam this way n it works great.

John Moon December 23rd, 2006 11:10 AM

Thanks, I will give it that a try.

Charles Papert December 23rd, 2006 01:59 PM

This seems to be the most popular quick-release assembly people are using, probably since the Bogen plate is adopted by various other tripod manufacturers. If yours is different, see if the maker of your head offers a similar device. It will add a bit of weight to the top (and raise the center of gravity), but it will greatly reduce your balancing woes. Hint: once you have achieved a balance you like with the camera, mark the various axes with a paint pen or silver Sharpie etc. so you can easily return to them as needed.

I think that anyone who uses a GC will like using the Smooth Shooter. If you ever end up doing a shot that requires more range than the arm allows, you can simply do that shot with the GC in handheld mode. Also, you should look into Terry's Indicam, which is a nifty setup and is compatible with your GC.

Terry Thompson December 31st, 2006 10:28 PM

Charles,

As usual...you are the man. Thanks also for the plug.

Hey, Any suggestions as to where I can get a bunch of these at a better price? I want to include them as an option for the Indicam PILOT system. I'm also working on a low mode adaptor as per your suggestions. Lots of stuff going on here but this isn't my thread.

Hope to see you and Amy in the near future.

Terry
Indicam

Charles Papert January 1st, 2007 05:38 AM

Probably contact Bogen/Manfrotto to see if you can get set up as a dealer...?

Dean Sensui January 1st, 2007 04:29 PM

This is the plate I use. It indexes precisely at the same place each time and mounts/dismounts fast.

Bogen / Manfrotto 394 Rapid Connect

http://www.bhphotovideo.com/bnh/cont...ughType=search

I made the switch on all my cameras especially since I was struggling one day to slip a dovetail mount onto a tripod while in the cabin of a boat in rough conditions. Not only was it difficult but it was also making me sick! :-)

It's part of a Glidecam system that I use occasionally and it allows the camera to be pulled off easily for shoulder-mount work, then back onto the Glidecam without having to rebalance at all. And, as someone said, as long as the camera's physical configuration remains unchanged.


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