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Yashica D tripod head option: long exposures

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Hi,

What's a good head for the Yashica D with it's tripod mount and door knob combination.

How about the Arca Swiss P0 without a plate?
 

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Over the years I've owned many Yashica TLR's and several different tripods, it really doesn't matter what tripod or head.
 
If you do it like me. Just go headless. I find it much easier too deal with, tripod is smaller and lighter. I just use a tripod with a rotating center column and use the tripod legs too level it out. At most i will use a quick disconnect mounted on the tripod, but normally nothing at all.
 
I prefer separate axes and I do not like nor trust a ball tripod head with my equipment.
 
If you do it like me. Just go headless. I find it much easier too deal with, tripod is smaller and lighter. I just use a tripod with a rotating center column and use the tripod legs too level it out. At most i will use a quick disconnect mounted on the tripod, but normally nothing at all.

This echoes What I've done with TLRs and square-format SLRs and monopods/tripods for decades... just a camera-specific quick-release device. Simple and effective. Occasionally I'll use a ball head with the SLR if in the field.
 
Yes, I think, if it is anything like the124g, it would be prudent to not clamp the 4 feet on the camera bottom against the tripod head.
 
I have mounted my 124G and Yashica 12 onto heads using Arca Swiss style plates, but as ic-racer mentioned be careful of damaging the base(back) as the four feet are on a different level than the tripod thread. I use washers as spacers to match the height. It's bit of a pain, but works.
 
I have mounted my 124G and Yashica 12 onto heads using Arca Swiss style plates, but as ic-racer mentioned be careful of damaging the base(back) as the four feet are on a different level than the tripod thread. I use washers as spacers to match the height. It's bit of a pain, but works.

Yes, that's the pain I don't want. It's either get a C220 or the Arca Swiss p0.
 
I don't have a Yashica D but it's the same as most Yashica TLRs and many TLRs. The feet stick down a little. Either use a tripod with a small head, or use a tripod with a larger head and a soft surface like a rubber pad and tighten down the tripod screw just enough to hold the camera. Don't tighten it with a strongman's torque or you might distort the bottom plate. Abusing them is probably the origin of the idea that TLRs are subject to damage there.

Even a Bogen/Manfrotto hex quick release plate will fit in between the feet, so there is no need to buy a special expensive tripod head for an inexpensive TLR, but do that if it makes you happy or reassured.
 
Abusing them is probably the origin of the idea that TLRs are subject to damage there.

I think another source of the 'fragile back' story is if you pick up the tripod with the camera mounted and walk along bouncing the head, etc.

Use a quick release plate and remove the camera from tripod head when moving. Beyond this, tripod head choice is a 17 page discussion here, which probably already exists about 9 times. For a simple TLR like the Yashica-D, the weight is small and it is centered very close to the mounting point.
 
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"Poor design on their part . I guess they felt the camera would not often be used on a tripod." Rod Klukas
 
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