John McCully
April 24th, 2011, 05:31 PM
Yes, I know; when Chris Soucy reads the subject line above, as I know he will, he might immediately come perilously close to experiencing a spontaneous acute myocardial infarction along with a severe apoplectic fit and a painful bout of acute indigestion.
Calm down, my Dunedin friend, and read on.
It has been said here, I seem to recall, that when shooting HD nothing short of a high-end Sachtler or Vinten setup, and preferably an O’Conner, is what one needs to ensure acceptable footage. And when one sees the setups many folks have; huge cameras, gigantic lenses, endless attachments, I do appreciate that a tripod setup of that nature is de rigueur. When I shot the opening of the Mount Somers Walkway shelter on the south face I lugged my EX1 up the mountain and a porter carried my tripod. He has since resigned, the pay was less than satisfactory, he complained, and as yet I have not been successful in finding a replacement.
‘Carry it yourself. And do understand that anything less and your camera will wobble like my great grandmother after two glasses of sherry’, I can hear Soucy say. Well, Soucy is twice as big as me and half my age, and furthermore I doubt he has ever ventured with his kit more than 50 metres from his gigantic 4x4.
The good news; last week my little world of HD video changed dramatically, very much for the better, I am happy to report. A Sony CX700v arrived thanks to B&H, and when I opened the box I knew right away that B&H had got it wrong; this thing was just a toy and obviously a shipping screw-up had occurred. With serious skepticism I charged the battery and stepped outside and pressed the trigger. I was amazed; as some of you know, the footage was indeed HD and remarkably pleasing at that. Now, let me hasten to add this little 490g (with battery) monster will not replace my EX1 across the board but the next mountain I climb to shoot whatever this will be the kit I take along (with no attachments, not even the lens hood).
And so to my need for an ultra-lightweight tripod setup; I must carry it myself. I don’t need panning and tilting capability, nice but not necessary, but a leveling bubble would be a good thing. Light weight is very important, extremely important. These days even when shopping for a new cell phone weight is the first spec I look at.
Suggestions gratefully received.
Calm down, my Dunedin friend, and read on.
It has been said here, I seem to recall, that when shooting HD nothing short of a high-end Sachtler or Vinten setup, and preferably an O’Conner, is what one needs to ensure acceptable footage. And when one sees the setups many folks have; huge cameras, gigantic lenses, endless attachments, I do appreciate that a tripod setup of that nature is de rigueur. When I shot the opening of the Mount Somers Walkway shelter on the south face I lugged my EX1 up the mountain and a porter carried my tripod. He has since resigned, the pay was less than satisfactory, he complained, and as yet I have not been successful in finding a replacement.
‘Carry it yourself. And do understand that anything less and your camera will wobble like my great grandmother after two glasses of sherry’, I can hear Soucy say. Well, Soucy is twice as big as me and half my age, and furthermore I doubt he has ever ventured with his kit more than 50 metres from his gigantic 4x4.
The good news; last week my little world of HD video changed dramatically, very much for the better, I am happy to report. A Sony CX700v arrived thanks to B&H, and when I opened the box I knew right away that B&H had got it wrong; this thing was just a toy and obviously a shipping screw-up had occurred. With serious skepticism I charged the battery and stepped outside and pressed the trigger. I was amazed; as some of you know, the footage was indeed HD and remarkably pleasing at that. Now, let me hasten to add this little 490g (with battery) monster will not replace my EX1 across the board but the next mountain I climb to shoot whatever this will be the kit I take along (with no attachments, not even the lens hood).
And so to my need for an ultra-lightweight tripod setup; I must carry it myself. I don’t need panning and tilting capability, nice but not necessary, but a leveling bubble would be a good thing. Light weight is very important, extremely important. These days even when shopping for a new cell phone weight is the first spec I look at.
Suggestions gratefully received.