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  1. #1
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    Posts
    1,477

    Gimbal Tripod/Monopod heads

    I recently came across a guy using one of these while shooting birds in a local park. He was using an 800 fixed zoom (probably a $10 000 lens or better) and he had it mounted on teh neatest looking monopod head I have ever seen. It allowed fluid movement while keeping the camera steady at the same time.

    I have done a bit of research and found that these heads are growing in popularity, but are still extravagantly priced.

    Has anyone used one of these mounts and if so would you think it would be worth the averag $500 USD price tag if your main focus of shooting is Nature, Wildlife/Sports? Even at the hobbyist level?

    I am curious to hear anyones experience with this type of equipment.

    Images below are not mine but from the manufacturers websites with links to give them their credit.

    Wimberly:

    http://www.tripodhead.com/products/sidekick-main.cfm

    JoBu Design:

    http://www.jobu-design.com/gimbals.html
    Shooting with an Olympus Evolt E-510 and loving it


    Equipment list:
    Olympus Evolt E-3, E-620, E-500
    Olympus Zuiko 40 - 150 F4.0 - 5.6
    Olympus Zuiko 14 - 45 F 2.8 - 3.6
    Sigma 50 - 500 F 4.0 - 6.3
    Sigma 70 - 200 F2.8
    Olympus FL-38 Flash x2
    Vivitar 285 HV
    Better Beamer Flash Extender

    http://www.jdtimages.ca/

    A Photographer that is fluent in Sarcasm.

  2. #2
    has-been... another view's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2003
    Location
    Rockford, IL
    Posts
    7,649

    Re: Gimbal Tripod/Monopod heads

    If you're shooting big, heavy, expensive lenses like that then a head that can handle the lens is a necessity. They've been around for a few years or so, but I've never used one myself. That's not my type of shooting but you might try asking in the sports and nature forums here if any of those guys are using stuff like this (not that I know of).

    At least with Nikon, their biggest lens is a 600 f4 (other than an 800 manual focus or the mirror lenses) and they have teleconverters to use with it to extend the focal length. Single focal length lenses are known as "prime" lenses.

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