Clive McLaughlin
July 24th, 2014, 02:37 AM
I know this may come across like a novice question, but I’ve actually got three years of stabiliser experience.
Just last year I bought a Laing P04, which was as you know, cheaper than the Glidecam and Merlin options, but a significant step up from my previous Flycam Nano DSLR.
I used it with my Canon 6D for most of this year - and whilst useable - I always knew that it wasn’t quite as rock solid as my previous Flycam Nano which was less than half the price.
Now I attempt to rebalance with my new Sony A7s - and I’m having a nightmare with it!
I balance on a light stand - I balance left/right, then front/back, I adjust for a 2-3 secong drop time. It stays straight and true on the stand. Once I lift it off to see how it handles, the vertical post begins to rotate and as it does the camera begins to tilt.
Have a got a dodgy gimbal?
I may post a video if anyone feels that would be useful.
The Laing has a great construction, great materials, fine adjustment knobs - I really had high hopes, but sadly I’m about to lose it with this contraption!
Just last year I bought a Laing P04, which was as you know, cheaper than the Glidecam and Merlin options, but a significant step up from my previous Flycam Nano DSLR.
I used it with my Canon 6D for most of this year - and whilst useable - I always knew that it wasn’t quite as rock solid as my previous Flycam Nano which was less than half the price.
Now I attempt to rebalance with my new Sony A7s - and I’m having a nightmare with it!
I balance on a light stand - I balance left/right, then front/back, I adjust for a 2-3 secong drop time. It stays straight and true on the stand. Once I lift it off to see how it handles, the vertical post begins to rotate and as it does the camera begins to tilt.
Have a got a dodgy gimbal?
I may post a video if anyone feels that would be useful.
The Laing has a great construction, great materials, fine adjustment knobs - I really had high hopes, but sadly I’m about to lose it with this contraption!