Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/02/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In article <3.0.32.19970220193313.006ca9f0@popmail.voicenet.com>, Richard Clompus <rclompus@voicenet.com> writes >I am in the market for a very light weight tripod that I can lash >to a Domke or Billingham Bag while walking around Europe. I have >considered the thinnest Bogen tripod, 3011, with a small ball head. >Cullman makes a collapsable tripod that lays flat but I'm not sure if it >would fit in a larger camera bag. I picked up an excellent Bogen monopod >3249 and a Gitzo Reporter monopod. They are light weight but not stable >enough for a pinhole lens on a M6 Leica. >Does anyone have a recommendation for a currently available light weight >small tripod that will extend at least to 5 feet. For the same degree of stability as the Bogen you mention, a Gitzo can be lighter, and that is before you get to look at the carbon fibre models. I have the G120 (Sport Performance) and it weighs 1.54kg and reaches 1.47m. It seems to be perfectly stable even at its maximum height with a rangefinder camera, as long as it isn't windy. I've also recently got the Gitzo G026- its a very bendy, spindly thing that I got for use with a Rollei 35, Minox 35 or Minilux, and, without using the central column extension at all, a TLR or rangefinder. Just for the hell of it I've just shot a roll of Fuji 64T slide film with a Leica M body and 50 and 90mm lenses indoors on this ultralight tripod at its maximum height with slow shutter speeds of around a half second and one second, using newsprint and such as subject. This would seem to be obvious folly but (and I hesitate to say this) the slides look extremely sharp through an 8x loupe. This is a ridiculously lightweight tripod (1.07kg, max height a bendy 1.38m) and I only bought it because I suffer from chronic fatigue syndrome and thus I feel it is an appropriate piece of equipment for me to own- though what use it will get I don't know. The slightest breeze would probably render it useless, but for use with small cameras on calm days or indoors, it may turn out to be very useful. I'd recommend the G120, but the closely related G126 Sport Performance Tatalux may be even better, as it has four shorter leg sections so it folds up much smaller (0.38m as opposed to the 0.53m of the G120), but still reaches a height of 1.35m. I'd like one of these myself. I'd suggest getting a Gitzo catalogue. Tripods will never seem quite the same again. - -- JB