If the OP thinks the Scratch Arca-Swiss base is expensive at $44, a $100+ (at least) used Leica Hand Grip might not be for him.
I did that trawl too. I was impressed by the number of those grips available, and it did cross my mind to wonder how useful their owners had actually found them. Obviously it does the job of centring the tripod bush. Does anyone have any observation about how useful it is as a handgrip?I did a quick trawl and found the Leica grip second hand for between £40 and £70 in camera dealers.
I really appreciate everyone's thoughts and suggestions. I realise that what I am seeking may be impossible, and that I am going to have to compromise on the ideals I listed above. So the experience of those with similar camera, interests and only occasional need for a tripod are particularly helpful.
I did that trawl too. I was impressed by the number of those grips available, and it did cross my mind to wonder how useful their owners had actually found them. Obviously it does the job of centring the tripod bush. Does anyone have any observation about how useful it is as a handgrip?
That's a pretty specific requirement. If the OP just wants it for local, around-town or hiking use, it wouldn't have to fit in a suitcase. Besides, he's in the UK so he could take a train to photograph the Eiffel Tower at night.A tripod should fold up to be short enough to fit into a suitcase in case one wants to take it on a vacation with checked luggage. Mine went with me to France specifically to take night photographs of the Eiffel Tower.
That's a pretty specific requirement. If the OP just wants it for local, around-town or hiking use, it wouldn't have to fit in a suitcase. Besides, he's in the UK so he could take a train to photograph the Eiffel Tower at night.
I did that trawl too. I was impressed by the number of those grips available, and it did cross my mind to wonder how useful their owners had actually found them. Obviously it does the job of centring the tripod bush. Does anyone have any observation about how useful it is as a handgrip?
I hate carrying gear, so I'm not really a fan of tripods. But more than once recently I wished I had one with me. My existing Benbo tripod drove me nuts on every occasional use through about 30 years of ownership, and thankfully is now broken. So it may be time for a re[lacement.
My requirements are:
- holds a Leica M securely despite its end-of-baseplate tripod bush;
- has a pan-and-tilt head rather than a ball-and-socket;
- extends to at least 5ft 6in (1.67m);
- weighs almost nothing, but has a suspension hook for a bag of rocks if needed.
Anyone got a recommendation?
Agreed about both the Leica ball head and the Gitzo G1027. I use this setup with the center column all the way down for my Barnack Leicas with a Visoflex and vertical viewfinder. (I am too tall to be comfortable with the G1027 with the center column all the way up and a 90º viewfinder on the Visoflex.)If you have ever used a Leica ball head, you wouldn’t rule that out. Look for the rings on the ball. Locks securely every time.
I have a Gitzo G1027 CF tripod with one on top and I can take it anywhere.
Anyone got a recommendation?
Thanks, appreciated, I will consider that carefully. Folded size, weight and price are closer to what I had in mind. There seem to be infinite variants.If the biggest camera on this tripod is going to be a 35mm rangefinder, I recommend the Slik Sprint Pro III with the pan/tilt head.
It's inexpensive, it's lightweight, and while I wouldn't use it in a force 10 gale, I've been very happy with mine. It is not for large cameras, it won't carry your 4x5, or even many medium format cameras-- but it's not for that.
Since the focus is on light weight, the center pin of the quick release plate is fixed, but you could add something like this.
I use Induro carbon fiber tripods and heads. https://www.indurogear.com/ They have a wide selection of heads and tripods. The carbon are lighter than the steel ones. Remember that tripod weight increase as a cube of the distance walked.
I don't think that's the link you intended. Also, steel ones?
That is the website for the company. One has to do due diligence and find the carbon fiber models. I include the whole site because on must look at the different tripod heads which I have found becomes a matter of personal test as some like ball heads and others do not ...
It's coming up for me as a French language automobile site. It says it is an automobile blog developed by an automobile enthusiast.
The website I have used for years seems to have been taken over.
Tripod heads: https://benrousa.com/photo/tripod-heads/
Tripods: https://www.alltripods.com/induro-tripods
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