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Anyone use a Monopod? Been itching to buy a monopod rather than always using my tripod. It's just heavy and not as easy to lug around. Been looking at a few options and found theres ones that has "feet" Have any of you guys used something like this and can say pros/cons? |
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What type of shooting are you doing these days? |
Yes, I use a monopod when shooting some video. That's pretty much the only purpose I use it for. Everything else I'd use a tripod. I have a Benro 48FB Series 4 monopod with Benro S6 video head I'll most likely have to sell it very soon along with almost all my other camera gear. I prefer my tripod over my monopod as it's full carbon fibre, so it's much lighter. However, the monopod is obviously less bulky so it's a bit easier to carry around. If I were to get another one, I would purchase a CF version if one exists. (I haven't done any research) |
If I were to purchase another monopod, I'd buy a CF one as well. My aluminum Manfrotto is seriously heavy. They do make CF ones, as the video guys I work with all have them. For still photography, the "feet" monopods aren't stable enough for my Nikon D3. With a point and shoot or a lightweight DSLR, maybe. I find with the D3 I _rarely_ use my monopod, occasionally for some rally/action stuff. But the truth is, I use it so infrequently that when I want it, I'm never carrying it... |
Been looking at the manfrotto one and it'll be mainly for video. I know I would want a flow head on it and the little feets but Im curios how they stand if they do well in slanted environments etc |
^ It should be adequate. The ball joint near the feet enables the monopod to accommodate most situations. Although if you were to leave the monopod unattended on a medium-steep slope, I have a feeling it would fall over, depending on the weight of the camera though. Something fairly light (less then 4lbs maybe?) should be fine. Anything heavier needs supervision of some kind. I normally use my D810, with batter grip, Nikon mic, and 24-70 f/2.8 VR on my monopod and unless everything is dead center it won't stay put. So I'm always behind the camera, guiding the monopod and/or video head to capture the shots I desire. However, if I attach my D7100 with the same microphone and Tokina 11-16 or something lighter, the monopod can handle almost any kind of terrain and stay straight, allowing me to leave it in place and move freely around the camera if I so choose. This is just my experience though. I highly recommend going to a store and trying out some monopods. Most camera stores will definitely let you play around with them. Some will even let you take their display models outdoors for a few minutes. |
Thanks Mike! Henry's is opening soon I'm going to pay them a visit haha |
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