Tiltall 4160

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David A. Goldfarb

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I've never seen a Tiltall that doesn't have a built-in head and a 1/4" camera screw. If you have a camera with a 3/8" screw, you could get a bushing for it. If the camera is too heavy for a 1/4" screw, it's too heavy for a Tiltall.
 
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Greg Heath

Greg Heath

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Thanks. Im asking for a friend. I gifted him a 4x5 camera and he purchased the Tiltall tripod. The Cambo has a 3/8” socket so told him to get a 3/8” bushing for it. Thanks for the response.
 

darkroommike

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A Tilt-All might work for a lightweight 4x5, I've used one with a Speed Graphic but it's a bit light for any monorail, if you do use it, make sure you get a good bushing, I've seen cheap bushings break and dump a camera to the ground.
 

removed account4

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not sure about the combo,
but i used the tiltall with a graphic view II
and it never let me down. great tripod !
 
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Greg Heath

Greg Heath

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A Tilt-All might work for a lightweight 4x5, I've used one with a Speed Graphic but it's a bit light for any monorail, if you do use it, make sure you get a good bushing, I've seen cheap bushings break and dump a camera to the ground.

It’s a Cambo SCX monorail.

I told him what to buy, but he purchased something else. Oh well.
 

Rick A

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I've used Tiltall's with Calumet CC-401 and 400 cameras, also Cambo mono's, it will handle it.Calumet used to sell Tiltall tripods as recommended gear. Tell your buddy to take the tripod apart and give it a thorough cleaning, especially check for gunk build up inside the handle recess of the head. Dirt and grime build up in there makes it difficult to lock the head in position and allows for creep using tilt. Grit in the legs is also a problem, clean and polish the leg sections, plus a very light film(or car wax) of silicone lets them slide smoothly.
 
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Greg Heath

Greg Heath

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I've used Tiltall's with Calumet CC-401 and 400 cameras, also Cambo mono's, it will handle it.Calumet used to sell Tiltall tripods as recommended gear. Tell your buddy to take the tripod apart and give it a thorough cleaning, especially check for gunk build up inside the handle recess of the head. Dirt and grime build up in there makes it difficult to lock the head in position and allows for creep using tilt. Grit in the legs is also a problem, clean and polish the leg sections, plus a very light film(or car wax) of silicone lets them slide smoothly.
Thanks. I’ll send the info to him.
 

E. von Hoegh

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I've used Tiltall's with Calumet CC-401 and 400 cameras, also Cambo mono's, it will handle it.Calumet used to sell Tiltall tripods as recommended gear. Tell your buddy to take the tripod apart and give it a thorough cleaning, especially check for gunk build up inside the handle recess of the head. Dirt and grime build up in there makes it difficult to lock the head in position and allows for creep using tilt. Grit in the legs is also a problem, clean and polish the leg sections, plus a very light film(or car wax) of silicone lets them slide smoothly.
Also check that the spikes screw in and out, thses often get dirty and corroded.
 

Alan Gales

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Some of those Cambo/Calumet 4x5 cameras are really light (for a monorail). I had an entry level model that weighed only six pounds. I don't know what an SCX weighs.
 

Bipin

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I use a Tiltall with the head removed and exchanged for a Linhof Profi II. I bought 1-1/4" aluminum tube stock, made a compression fitting on one end with a bunch of stacked washers, drilled a hole in them to accept a 3/8 screw, and attached the ball head. It'll take a ridiculous beating without coming apart. (I made a mock-up with leftover tube stock and a brick bolted to the compression fitting - smashed it on the ground, and it still held. Point being; the Tiltall legs are more than capable for what the head cannot hold, and with your own ball head, a mallet, and some files, you can fix what I'd consider to be the weakest link in the chain.
 
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