Robert Poole
Member
I have a very heavy Nesbitt mahogany 8x10 and find the Gitzo ball head unmanageable. What recommendations please? Maybe a geared head?
A seconding for the Sinar Pan Tilt Head. I prefer the green early ones and I have accumulated five or six over the years. Used to be cheap and plentiful. Manfrotto three way heads with the 4x4 camera plate works well with just about everything I have up to 8x10. I also have some very old FOBA heads and right now I am on the fence on those. But the first two are my choices. I prefer the Sinar without question.
Early surveyors also used a plum bob to ensure the tripod was level and on a more modern note, however, I've used bubble levels to ensure level.Everyone by now probably knows that I don't use any kind of head. The 8x10 goes straight onto the platform top of my larger Ries wooden tripod, and the standard 3/8-16 turnbolt below gets tightened. More stable than any head, lighter weight, and fast to work with once you get accustomed. It's how early surveyors did it for decades; and they had to be especially accurate even atop remote peaks. But if you do feel the need to go with a head, excellent suggestions have already been given, like the Ries head itself, and a couple other already mentioned options. The good ole Bogen 3029 is the poor man's pan-tilt option, but rather tall and heavy. The Sinar option is really more appropriate for monorail design cameras like their. Ball heads are the least logical choice. And it would take a heck of a big heavy expensive geared head to handle an 8X10 decently; not recommended.
That's the whole point, Alan - a functional platform effect capable of stabilizing both the breadth and width of a flatbed camera efficiently. I like the platform-style top certain tripods by themselves; but the Ries head also serves as a stable platform with a low center of gravity. A "stem" effect like a ball head is the least logical; and geared heads have the risk of internal gear play unless especially well made. Either way, a lot of extra weight. The problem with strong yet tall heads like the old Bogen cast one is that their very height contributes an additional significant torque vector making things harder to stabilize. The good ole Gitzo 5-series low-profile pan-tilt head was a decent choice up to a certain point. Some of these newer "half-ball" concept devices, that nest in a dished out area of the head rather then operate above it, also make sense. But I still think that no head at all is the smartest option. Sure works for me. (I do use pan-tilt heads with smaller gear like medium format, though certainly not for my heavy 300 EDIF Pentax 67 telephoto I was shooting yesterday - I bolt that thing straight to the top of the same Ries tripod that I use for 8X10. Makes all the difference in the world in terms of stability and truly crisp shots, especially in the wind.)
I use a Bogen 3047. There are large and small quick release plates.I have a very heavy Nesbitt mahogany 8x10 and find the Gitzo ball head unmanageable. What recommendations please? Maybe a geared head?
I use a Bogen 3047. There are large and small quick release plates.
How much does it weigh? Now subtract that amount and my way of doing it will obviously be that much even less. I don't use any kind of head all all atop any of my tripods for LF usage. None of their added weight, none of their added stability issues, none of their additional cost. No head at all. You can't come up with a lighter head weight option than zero. My Ries tripod turn bolt goes straight into the 8x10 camera base itself; nothing in between.
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