Nick Hockings
August 22nd, 2005, 11:16 PM
I recently shot some footage, of vultures nesting and soaing, with XL2 and EF L100-400mm. (This gives a telephoto effect equivalent to 2800mm on a 35mm still camera.)
Some of the footage was usable including a couple of long duration pans, but it was abundantly clear that my Manfrotto 501 was not the right tool for the job. On static shots, there is too much slack in the system causing it to drift off target when I let go of the handle after locking it down. It gives a sicky pan, not noticeable at wide angle, but very obvious at times on super-tele. (Yes I did turn off the OIS on the EF lens.)
Now the ideal equipment for such shots would be a massive outside broadcast tripod bolted to concrete....but that isn't feasible for me.
A number of factors limit my choice of upgrade. I need something portable enough to hike with over rough terrain, and robust enough to survive airline travel. (The mounting plate of the 501 was cracked despite the good bag that came with it.)
Money always has competing uses, so I need to work out what is the most affordable set up, that will produce a broadcast quality image under such circumstances.
I will also need to get a paired-rods bracket to clamp both camera and lens, and allow the combination to be balanced correctly on the head.
Can anyone recomend what does/does not work for panning at super-tele?
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PS:
I've just found the "Canon 100-400mm EF Lens on XL1" thread in
The Digital Video Information Network > Standard Definition DV Camcorders > Canon XL1 / XL1S Watchdog > Canon XL1 / XL1S Lens & Optics .
Much of it would be relevant to XL2, JVC HD101, or any other brand.
Some of the footage was usable including a couple of long duration pans, but it was abundantly clear that my Manfrotto 501 was not the right tool for the job. On static shots, there is too much slack in the system causing it to drift off target when I let go of the handle after locking it down. It gives a sicky pan, not noticeable at wide angle, but very obvious at times on super-tele. (Yes I did turn off the OIS on the EF lens.)
Now the ideal equipment for such shots would be a massive outside broadcast tripod bolted to concrete....but that isn't feasible for me.
A number of factors limit my choice of upgrade. I need something portable enough to hike with over rough terrain, and robust enough to survive airline travel. (The mounting plate of the 501 was cracked despite the good bag that came with it.)
Money always has competing uses, so I need to work out what is the most affordable set up, that will produce a broadcast quality image under such circumstances.
I will also need to get a paired-rods bracket to clamp both camera and lens, and allow the combination to be balanced correctly on the head.
Can anyone recomend what does/does not work for panning at super-tele?
-------------------------------
PS:
I've just found the "Canon 100-400mm EF Lens on XL1" thread in
The Digital Video Information Network > Standard Definition DV Camcorders > Canon XL1 / XL1S Watchdog > Canon XL1 / XL1S Lens & Optics .
Much of it would be relevant to XL2, JVC HD101, or any other brand.