Peter Hoare
October 29th, 2007, 11:04 AM
Hi,
I have been making a jib/crane for a while, you might have seen the videos on youtube, but here are some very old pictures:
www.peter-hoare.co.uk/crane.jpg
www.peter-hoare.co.uk/crane2.jpg
www.peter-hoare.co.uk/crane3.jpg
I have since upgraded the camera head (the wooden one never was very stable) and I have changed the buckets of water for proper gym weights.
Here are some videos:
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=0elbsnRGVZM
The crane is made out of a 5 meter long piece of 50x50mm box section, 1.5mm wall section, cut into three sections which join together with a central block with two bolts that hold it together. It has a 5mm steel rope over the top with a mast to help bear the weight of the camera, it works pretty well to stop the boom sagging.
I noticed many home made jibs used a solid rod under the main boom that keeps the camera level. I had planned to do this but due to the cost and the impracticality, I looked for alternatives and came up with a cable to replace the solid rod and put a bungee cord on the top to keep the cable tight, and it works very well.
-Remote Head-
I recently (a month or so ago) decided to make a remote head for the crane and it is more or less done.
www.peter-hoare.co.uk/headoncrane.jpg
It has pan and tilt, both operated with 810:1 geared 12v motors. the power is transferred using a 1:1 toothed belt system.
The control system is a Roboteq AX500 robot control board with an Apem 5000 series joystick wired into the D sub plug on the board.
Here is a video of the head:
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=Azt6YHi0ASM
Yeah, its noisy but it doesn’t seem to make much of a difference with the shots, I record audio separately most of the time so the sound from the motors is usually excluded.
There are quite a few videos on my youtube channel that relate to the camera head which will help to show how it works if anyone would like to know.
I think thats it for now, any questions just ask me, I have had quite a lot of interest through youtube so I am used to the questions.
Thanks,
Pete.
I have been making a jib/crane for a while, you might have seen the videos on youtube, but here are some very old pictures:
www.peter-hoare.co.uk/crane.jpg
www.peter-hoare.co.uk/crane2.jpg
www.peter-hoare.co.uk/crane3.jpg
I have since upgraded the camera head (the wooden one never was very stable) and I have changed the buckets of water for proper gym weights.
Here are some videos:
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=0elbsnRGVZM
The crane is made out of a 5 meter long piece of 50x50mm box section, 1.5mm wall section, cut into three sections which join together with a central block with two bolts that hold it together. It has a 5mm steel rope over the top with a mast to help bear the weight of the camera, it works pretty well to stop the boom sagging.
I noticed many home made jibs used a solid rod under the main boom that keeps the camera level. I had planned to do this but due to the cost and the impracticality, I looked for alternatives and came up with a cable to replace the solid rod and put a bungee cord on the top to keep the cable tight, and it works very well.
-Remote Head-
I recently (a month or so ago) decided to make a remote head for the crane and it is more or less done.
www.peter-hoare.co.uk/headoncrane.jpg
It has pan and tilt, both operated with 810:1 geared 12v motors. the power is transferred using a 1:1 toothed belt system.
The control system is a Roboteq AX500 robot control board with an Apem 5000 series joystick wired into the D sub plug on the board.
Here is a video of the head:
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=Azt6YHi0ASM
Yeah, its noisy but it doesn’t seem to make much of a difference with the shots, I record audio separately most of the time so the sound from the motors is usually excluded.
There are quite a few videos on my youtube channel that relate to the camera head which will help to show how it works if anyone would like to know.
I think thats it for now, any questions just ask me, I have had quite a lot of interest through youtube so I am used to the questions.
Thanks,
Pete.