Kevin Burnfield
October 5th, 2004, 01:02 PM
I just got off a 6 day shoot that I needed a jib for so I bought one of the Skycrane juniors for and damn, it was sweet.
I was going to build my own jib but I am so glad I didn't, it's a total pro piece of equipment. The unit breaks down into two 'arm' pieces and have a machined support piece that slides into each end and is bolted down and I doubt I would have been that smart.
The unit fit right onto my bogen tripod and worked smooth as silk with my XL1s. One nice thing that I didnt' think of but the guy who runs the company did is that the XL1S is lens heavy (especially since I was using an adapter and non-standard lenses) and they make a plate that fits the arm so you can mount the camera back a bit.
One of the coolest things about it was being able to mount it onto the Chapman peewee we had and was able to dolly in, lower and rotate down over a bed where the one character was lying. The director went crazy when he watched it on the monitor.
For a shot in a small area I also mounted it on my bogen and ran it horizontally using my PVC track dolly for a shot that floated in over a kitchen table to a really tight CU of this one character that was really cool and for a bar scene I was able to get it up near the ceiling to include a ceiling fan in the shot before lowering down to head level for an actor's lines.
I would highly recommend it to anyone considering jibs. The price is well worth what you get for it. I'm getting a LOT of use out of it in ways I never thought I would and have been using it for a lot of stuff I never thought I'd use a jib for.
I was going to build my own jib but I am so glad I didn't, it's a total pro piece of equipment. The unit breaks down into two 'arm' pieces and have a machined support piece that slides into each end and is bolted down and I doubt I would have been that smart.
The unit fit right onto my bogen tripod and worked smooth as silk with my XL1s. One nice thing that I didnt' think of but the guy who runs the company did is that the XL1S is lens heavy (especially since I was using an adapter and non-standard lenses) and they make a plate that fits the arm so you can mount the camera back a bit.
One of the coolest things about it was being able to mount it onto the Chapman peewee we had and was able to dolly in, lower and rotate down over a bed where the one character was lying. The director went crazy when he watched it on the monitor.
For a shot in a small area I also mounted it on my bogen and ran it horizontally using my PVC track dolly for a shot that floated in over a kitchen table to a really tight CU of this one character that was really cool and for a bar scene I was able to get it up near the ceiling to include a ceiling fan in the shot before lowering down to head level for an actor's lines.
I would highly recommend it to anyone considering jibs. The price is well worth what you get for it. I'm getting a LOT of use out of it in ways I never thought I would and have been using it for a lot of stuff I never thought I'd use a jib for.