Alain Mayo
April 7th, 2007, 06:41 PM
Is anyone in here using it? I just order mine and i plan to use it witm my xh-a1 for weddings and birthdays. I need to know if you can hold just the left handle with left hand and with the right hand use the zoom and record botton. in other words be able to zoom while holding the spiderbrace with the left hand.
Bill Busby
April 7th, 2007, 08:50 PM
I have no idea, but I would think this post would belong elsewhere since this is basically for clips, etc.
Bill
Jonathan Gentry
April 7th, 2007, 09:21 PM
The answer is yes you can. However, I find the A1/G1 to be heavy and particularly very front heavy and these braces do little to releave the weight on your arms. I tripod as much as possible.
-Jonathan
Alain Mayo
April 7th, 2007, 10:44 PM
The answer is yes you can. However, I find the A1/G1 to be heavy and particularly very front heavy and these braces do little to releave the weight on your arms. I tripod as much as possible.
-Jonathan
I hate tripods. I just use it for vows in church after that I use my monopod. I Bought the spyderbrace for stadiness.
Alain Mayo
April 7th, 2007, 10:45 PM
I hate tripods. I just use it for vows in church after that I use my monopod. I Bought the spyderbrace for stadiness.
The moderator can feel free to move my post to the other forum. I din't realized this was the clips section
Kevin Shaw
April 7th, 2007, 10:56 PM
Is anyone in here using it? I just order mine and i plan to use it witm my xh-a1 for weddings and birthdays. I need to know if you can hold just the left handle with left hand and with the right hand use the zoom and record botton. in other words be able to zoom while holding the spiderbrace with the left hand.
I got one recently for use with my Sony FX1 and have used it at one event. Yes, you can steady it using just the left grip and this is more comfotable than other shoulder braces I've used in the past, because the grip is low enough to let your arm be somewhat relaxed. It's still hard to hold a camera steady for long periods of time but it's good for walking around.
Alain Mayo
April 9th, 2007, 06:27 PM
I got one recently for use with my Sony FX1 and have used it at one event. Yes, you can steady it using just the left grip and this is more comfotable than other shoulder braces I've used in the past, because the grip is low enough to let your arm be somewhat relaxed. It's still hard to hold a camera steady for long periods of time but it's good for walking around.
Thanks. I got the spiderbrace today and all I can say is wow. It's very good for panning and for stadiness. I tried zooming while holding it and i had no problem, so I found the answer to my original question.
Bob Howard
April 9th, 2007, 06:45 PM
I added, via a velcro pocket attachment, the means of adding a weight to the back side (rear) of the 'spider'. What goes in the pocket varies depending on what's been added to the front end of the camera - wide angle lens, camera light, shotgun microphone, whatever. The now balanced rig eases the arm load and also smooths out camera movement (pans and tilts).
Stephen Eastwood
September 30th, 2007, 01:01 PM
Anyway to attach a steady stick to the spider brace? I think that would take teh load off, I am planning on buying both and giving it a try.