I can recommend the Op/tech strap. The elasticity of the shoulder pad takes up much of the strain.
Heavy Artillery by Lars Holte, on Flickr
The biggest concern (for me) with using a tripod mount strap is the potential for the camera to unscrew the connection when you do not want it to, causing the camera and lens to fall to the ground.. I have one friend who had this happen with a BlackRapid strap and a high end digital Nikon camera and lens.
The second concern (for me) with using a tripod mount strap is the relative difficulty of using that camera with a tripod.
I've considered using a tripod mount strap, but my worry has been that it will unscrew. I considered it on the Mamiya.
I like the Blackrapid straps. http://www.blackrapid.com/
I used one with a D200, grip, flash and whatever lens I had on it and it worked nicely. Now if only I could find that strap....
The biggest concern (for me) with using a tripod mount strap is the potential for the camera to unscrew the connection when you do not want it to, causing the camera and lens to fall to the ground.. I have one friend who had this happen with a BlackRapid strap and a high end digital Nikon camera and lens.
The second concern (for me) with using a tripod mount strap is the relative difficulty of using that camera with a tripod.
Thank you for all your replies. Problem with a lot of these straps is that my camera body does not have strap lugs, so the only kind of strap that will work for it, as far as I can tell, is going to be either a half-case (which I can make, in my COPIOUS spare time) or a strap that attaches to the tripod lug. The other two bodies I have do have strap lugs, and I use leather straps for them because they look great and leather is very strong.
I looked at the Blackrapid strap, but the guy at the camera shop hesitated when I asked about it. He also hesitated when I asked about the Joby and the Opteka, just because of the weight of the camera. The metal bit that screws into the tripod mount isn't worrying; what's worrying to me is the plastic/resin bit that is the swivel on the strap mount. And I ended up with some pretty serious sticker shock when I looked at the Blackrapid straps. Yikes! Yes, I know about the cost of the strap vs the cost of the camera, so it might be worth it if I can find one that will for sure hold the camera and its heaviest lens.
I very, very rarely put a camera on a tripod, unless I'm using my 4x5 Speed Graphics, so I'm not worried about that. I am pretty sure that putting such a strap on the camera, I probably wouldn't take it off any time soon so I would most likely use some sort of a thread sealant.
It's just a pain to carry the thing around in hand.
Now the cable I could go for!
Just makes me wonder what the engineering thought process was to make a camera body with no lugs. I often run into poorly-designed but perfectly functional technology, and figure that most things are not designed by users but by engineers. I think the engineers who designed this camera body with no lugs must have gone on to be software engineers for Microsoft.
Not very long ago, a lot (almost all?) cameras were sold with custom fitted cases that often included straps of their own.
It is awkward putting a case on a camera which has a neckstrap attached via camera lugs.
Custom fitted cases aren't made any more for new cameras, because preferences have changed.
When I bought my father his Retina IIIC a few years ago, at first he was reluctant to use it because there wasn't a case with it.
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