Scott Gold
October 26th, 2013, 02:44 PM
I'm looking to rent out my C300 when it's not in use, do you guys do this? Got any tips?
View Full Version : Do you rent out your C100 or C300? Scott Gold October 26th, 2013, 02:44 PM I'm looking to rent out my C300 when it's not in use, do you guys do this? Got any tips? James Manford October 26th, 2013, 03:12 PM Interesting idea. But I personally haven't got a clue on how I would go about it; to be legally covered etc incase of damage. Sabyasachi Patra October 27th, 2013, 03:35 AM I don't rent out camera alone. I offer my C300 to productions along with me as a cinematographer in one package. Chris Medico October 27th, 2013, 03:40 AM One avenue is to check with any local gear houses in your area. See if they currently offer that camera. If not see if they are interested in working with you on brokering yours. If you want to rent it out directly I suggest doing a good bit of research before going that route. Find out the insurance requirements to properly protect yourself. If you decide to rent it out directly get plugged in with the local freelance shooters. If the camera is in demand you'll start getting calls for it. Matt Davis October 30th, 2013, 11:41 AM When cameras cost $30k and up (with lenses and batteries) the cost of ownership would probably benefit from renting either via a gear house or to trusted individuals. Owners of Epics, F55s and (I guess) even Red Ones may get some sort of revenue - and their kit is designed for the stresses of the professional life. But at C100 levels, I'm not sure if the cost of insurance and boxing/consumables/replacements would suit 'partial' hire - you'd probably have to jump in and commit to full time hiring. I built my business model around charging for kit at (competitive) rental prices, then buying that kit for myself. I've loaned that kit to others on rare occasions, but don't want the stress and admin of dealing with petty losses, dinked lenses, dodgy dealers, repacking kit, and the inevitable double booking. Far happier to let renters do what they're good at. But if I owned an Epic? Hmmm.... Craig Chartier November 1st, 2013, 10:22 PM If your really gonna rent then go to rental websites and copy as much of their paperwork, as you can. Make your checkout list very detailed and always make a copy of a picture ID, signatures , etc. if you look like ou know what your doing, then the less likely you will be seen as an easy target for missing and damage. Serial numbers one rework, lots of guys rent out that camera, and if my viewfinder was damaged, I would rent out your camer and switch the finders, what are you gonna do? Sue me and you will need to prove it was your finder I had swaped out. Keep the package simple, don't add stuff like cables and extra batts just to look better. Bag, batts,charger port cap. Factory reset for each rental, do test recording of the news on tv, so you can prove it worked fine leaving your house the day I picked it up. I'm probably still gonna steal it from you but that's the way rentals go sometimes. |