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#1
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DIY stabilizer
Will make you look pretty stupid, but a pretty nifty solution for
stabilizing your camera. http://petapixel.com/2014/03/30/smal...etaphorically/ -- Sandman[.net] |
#2
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DIY stabilizer
On 30 Mar 2014 19:54:33 GMT, Sandman
wrote: Will make you look pretty stupid, but a pretty nifty solution for stabilizing your camera. http://petapixel.com/2014/03/30/smal...etaphorically/ Instead, tie the camera to a heavy brick. The weight of the assembly will resist vibrations. |
#3
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DIY stabilizer
In article , Peter Jason wrote:
Sandman: Will make you look pretty stupid, but a pretty nifty solution for stabilizing your camera. http://petapixel.com/2014/03/30/smal...etaphorically/ Instead, tie the camera to a heavy brick. The weight of the assembly will resist vibrations. I sort of have the idea that in the idea in the link, the stabilization will be from two points, not one. A dangling brick will most likely make the camera more unstable, and even one string you step on will only give it perpendicular stabilization, while this three-point idea will give you both lateral and perpendicular stabilization. -- Sandman[.net] |
#4
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DIY stabilizer
On 1 Apr 2014 04:45:45 GMT, Sandman
wrote: In article , Peter Jason wrote: Sandman: Will make you look pretty stupid, but a pretty nifty solution for stabilizing your camera. http://petapixel.com/2014/03/30/smal...etaphorically/ Instead, tie the camera to a heavy brick. The weight of the assembly will resist vibrations. I sort of have the idea that in the idea in the link, the stabilization will be from two points, not one. A dangling brick will most likely make the camera more unstable, and even one string you step on will only give it perpendicular stabilization, while this three-point idea will give you both lateral and perpendicular stabilization. The camera is tied firmly to the brick; it doesn't dangle at all. |
#5
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DIY stabilizer
On 2014-04-02 02:44:35 +0000, Peter Jason said:
On 1 Apr 2014 04:45:45 GMT, Sandman wrote: In article , Peter Jason wrote: Sandman: Will make you look pretty stupid, but a pretty nifty solution for stabilizing your camera. http://petapixel.com/2014/03/30/smal...etaphorically/ Instead, tie the camera to a heavy brick. The weight of the assembly will resist vibrations. I sort of have the idea that in the idea in the link, the stabilization will be from two points, not one. A dangling brick will most likely make the camera more unstable, and even one string you step on will only give it perpendicular stabilization, while this three-point idea will give you both lateral and perpendicular stabilization. The camera is tied firmly to the brick; it doesn't dangle at all. Oh for crying out aloud! Buy a damn tripod, monopod, or a decent stabilized lens. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#6
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DIY stabilizer
In article 201404012009403622-savageduck1@REMOVESPAMmecom, Savageduck wrote:
Sandman: Will make you look pretty stupid, but a pretty nifty solution for stabilizing your camera. http://petapixel.com/2014/03/30/smal...etaphorically/ Peter Jason: tie the camera to a heavy brick. The weight of the assembly will resist vibrations. Sandman: I sort of have the idea that in the idea in the link, the stabilization will be from two points, not one. A dangling brick will most likely make the camera more unstable, and even one string you step on will only give it perpendicular stabilization, while this three-point idea will give you both lateral and perpendicular stabilization. Peter Jason: The camera is tied firmly to the brick; it doesn't dangle at all. Oh for crying out aloud! Buy a damn tripod, monopod, or a decent stabilized lens. Hear hear, then you won't look quite so stupid as in the link -- Sandman[.net] |
#7
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DIY stabilizer
In article 201404012009403622-savageduck1@REMOVESPAMmecom, savageduck1
@{REMOVESPAM}me.com says... On 2014-04-02 02:44:35 +0000, Peter Jason said: On 1 Apr 2014 04:45:45 GMT, Sandman wrote: In article , Peter Jason wrote: Sandman: Will make you look pretty stupid, but a pretty nifty solution for stabilizing your camera. http://petapixel.com/2014/03/30/smal...etaphorically/ Instead, tie the camera to a heavy brick. The weight of the assembly will resist vibrations. I sort of have the idea that in the idea in the link, the stabilization will be from two points, not one. A dangling brick will most likely make the camera more unstable, and even one string you step on will only give it perpendicular stabilization, while this three-point idea will give you both lateral and perpendicular stabilization. The camera is tied firmly to the brick; it doesn't dangle at all. Oh for crying out aloud! Buy a damn tripod, monopod, or a decent stabilized lens. The brick idea is kind of nuts, but the point of the string system is that it's lightweight, compact, and portable. You can use it in places where a tripod isn't allowed, like within shooting distance of the White House (for some reason the brilliant marksmen at out security agencies think that a lightweight camera tripod can be used to support a sniper rifle--certain movies have reinforced that notion--apparently none of the agencies have ever tried it to see what actually happens). |
#8
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DIY stabilizer
On 4/1/2014 11:09 PM, Savageduck wrote:
On 2014-04-02 02:44:35 +0000, Peter Jason said: On 1 Apr 2014 04:45:45 GMT, Sandman wrote: In article , Peter Jason wrote: Sandman: Will make you look pretty stupid, but a pretty nifty solution for stabilizing your camera. http://petapixel.com/2014/03/30/smal...etaphorically/ Instead, tie the camera to a heavy brick. The weight of the assembly will resist vibrations. I sort of have the idea that in the idea in the link, the stabilization will be from two points, not one. A dangling brick will most likely make the camera more unstable, and even one string you step on will only give it perpendicular stabilization, while this three-point idea will give you both lateral and perpendicular stabilization. The camera is tied firmly to the brick; it doesn't dangle at all. Oh for crying out aloud! Buy a damn tripod, monopod, or a decent stabilized lens. there are a lot of places that don't allow tripods, or monopods. But, I guess the string should give you at lease 1-2 extra stops. -- PeterN |
#9
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DIY stabilizer
In article , Peter Jason wrote:
Sandman: Will make you look pretty stupid, but a pretty nifty solution for stabilizing your camera. http://petapixel.com/2014/03/30/smal...etaphorically/ Peter Jason: Instead, tie the camera to a heavy brick. The weight of the assembly will resist vibrations. Sandman: I sort of have the idea that in the idea in the link, the stabilization will be from two points, not one. A dangling brick will most likely make the camera more unstable, and even one string you step on will only give it perpendicular stabilization, while this three-point idea will give you both lateral and perpendicular stabilization. The camera is tied firmly to the brick; it doesn't dangle at all. So.. the brick is on the ground? That kind of limits your movements, doesn't it? -- Sandman[.net] |
#10
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DIY stabilizer
On 2014.04.01, 22:44 , Peter Jason wrote:
Instead, tie the camera to a heavy brick. The weight of the assembly will resist vibrations. This is a poor idea. Increasing mass decreases your ability to keep something steady because you're correcting for more when there is a disturbance which means muscles have to work harder (leading to fatigue and less ability to control). (Trying to shoot freehand with a 300 f/2.8, for example, teaches you this quite quickly). Adding mass for stability only works (typically) when the mass is attached to the ground, or when it is a resonant tuned system and the mass is carefully calculated (or experimented with) to find the right mass. -- ... it may be that "in the cloud" really isn't the best term for the services these companies offer. What they really want is to have us "on the leash." -David Pogue, Scientific American, 2014.02 |
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