Tony Tang
July 21st, 2005, 08:03 AM
It seems that at least for a Steadicam rig, a wireless RF LANC controller would be a must-have accessory. Does anyone know of any?
I'm not talking about IR (Infrared) remotes like for most TVs and pro-/consumer camcorders. I'm referring to RF (Radio Frequency) transmitters that don't require line-of-sight. The idea seems simple enough, but I haven't found any manufacturers that make this type of accessory.
The possibilities...
- Retrofit your current wired LANC controller with a wireless transmitter/receiver units.
- All-in-one LANC controller/transmitter with a receiver plug that goes into the camera.
- A receiver unit that plugs into the LANC conector on the camera but uses Bluetooth (2.4 GHz range) to communicate with a Bluetooth controller.
- Cameras with built-in wireless RF receivers that all speak a common wireless protocol like Bluetooth.
- Standard wireless protocol (e.g. Bluetooth) for follow-focus and zoom controllers so you could interchange the gear units with the hand-held controller units among different manufacturers.
Of course if we want standards, then manufacturers have to work with each other. At least with Bluetooth, there's the Bluetooth SIG to help moderate.
I'm not talking about IR (Infrared) remotes like for most TVs and pro-/consumer camcorders. I'm referring to RF (Radio Frequency) transmitters that don't require line-of-sight. The idea seems simple enough, but I haven't found any manufacturers that make this type of accessory.
The possibilities...
- Retrofit your current wired LANC controller with a wireless transmitter/receiver units.
- All-in-one LANC controller/transmitter with a receiver plug that goes into the camera.
- A receiver unit that plugs into the LANC conector on the camera but uses Bluetooth (2.4 GHz range) to communicate with a Bluetooth controller.
- Cameras with built-in wireless RF receivers that all speak a common wireless protocol like Bluetooth.
- Standard wireless protocol (e.g. Bluetooth) for follow-focus and zoom controllers so you could interchange the gear units with the hand-held controller units among different manufacturers.
Of course if we want standards, then manufacturers have to work with each other. At least with Bluetooth, there's the Bluetooth SIG to help moderate.