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--yes, the BH-55 is one of the best. You won't regret the purchase
I don't think you're wrong. For all but large lenses a Manfrotto 488 would do nicely at a fraction of the price of the top brands. Avoid the Slik Pro 800 as the Manfrotto 488 is much better.Is a Gitzo or Markins head really THAT much better? What about
simply recommending a decent Bogen/Manfrotto head? Sturdy,
reasonably priced and probably very much up to the task!
Please tell me if I'm wrong ;-) I'd really like to know!
--
IVer Erling Årva
I don't know if you are wrong, but in plain fact there is a reason that better, more expensive gear exists and why people recommend it.I am a bit confused regarding your tripod and ballhead
recommendations. Ok, you warmly recommnend Gitzo this, Kirk that,
Markins this and Burzynski that. Ok. Probably nice stuff. It's easy
to recommend another version of a Jaguar, or perhaps you should try
a Bentley this time? These are ballheads in the $3-4-500 ballpark!
The guy asking said he had a Manfrotto aluminum tripod. That should
give you a clue.
I just bought a Manfrotto 055prob after having managed with a
Daivwa geared column tripod I bought in1975 for ~$100. I used
this tripod even with a 300mm + 2x TC with reasonable success. Ok,
not an ideal solution, but not that much a problem either.
The reason I had to buy the M055prob was because I also bought a
Manfroto 303plus panohead which alone weighs over 2kgs, so with a
D200 + 10.5mm it just became too much.
Is a Gitzo or Markins head really THAT much better? What about
simply recommending a decent Bogen/Manfrotto head? Sturdy,
reasonably priced and probably very much up to the task!
Please tell me if I'm wrong ;-) I'd really like to know!
--
IVer Erling Årva
Nikonian
Good equipment isn't everything - good pictures are!I
Of course, Iver, but that wasn't really what you asked.My point was simply that there are good, less expensive
alternatives that can get the job done very well. Even a pro
doesn't necessarily have to buy the most expensive there is. That
can even be a waste. And a pro is in it for the money!
There are various reasons why some of the higher end stuff is so expensive. Many Gitzo tripods cost a fortune because they are made of carbon fibre, which saves weight. CF is expensive to buy, and expensive and difficult to machine. Many of the expensive ball heads cost a fortune because they are precision machined to reduce weight and to provide a stable platform for lenses up to 500mm F4 and above. They also have features such as captive knobs and Arca Swiss QR platforms which add cost.I don't know if you are wrong, but in plain fact there is a reasonI am a bit confused regarding your tripod and ballhead
recommendations. Ok, you warmly recommnend Gitzo this, Kirk that,
Markins this and Burzynski that. Ok. Probably nice stuff. It's easy
to recommend another version of a Jaguar, or perhaps you should try
a Bentley this time? These are ballheads in the $3-4-500 ballpark!
The guy asking said he had a Manfrotto aluminum tripod. That should
give you a clue.
I just bought a Manfrotto 055prob after having managed with a
Daivwa geared column tripod I bought in1975 for ~$100. I used
this tripod even with a 300mm + 2x TC with reasonable success. Ok,
not an ideal solution, but not that much a problem either.
The reason I had to buy the M055prob was because I also bought a
Manfroto 303plus panohead which alone weighs over 2kgs, so with a
D200 + 10.5mm it just became too much.
Is a Gitzo or Markins head really THAT much better? What about
simply recommending a decent Bogen/Manfrotto head? Sturdy,
reasonably priced and probably very much up to the task!
Please tell me if I'm wrong ;-) I'd really like to know!
--
IVer Erling Årva
Nikonian
Good equipment isn't everything - good pictures are!I
that better, more expensive gear exists and why people recommend it.
Perhaps you don't need what this gear offers, but this IS the Nikon
PRO forum, which should imply a certain level of sophistication.
If you have a D1/D2/D100/D200 then you are likely serious about
digital photography. Which means you've spent a serious amount of
money on your computer, on lenses and on other accessories. For
some reason there seems to be an idea that cheap tripods are just
fine. Well they aren't.
Don't take my word for it. Go buy a cheap tripod and a cheap head
and use them for a while and see if you still want to use them when
you see the results.
The reason people recommend the better gear is because it IS worth
the money. Why in the world would someone invest thousands and
thousands of dollars on camera, lenses, flash, computers, etc and
then cheap out on support and jeopardize the results at the most
fundamental level?
A cheap tripod might be fine indoors at a birthday party with a
wide angle lens or with a point and shoot camera on top, but if you
want to go outdoors and put a decent camera with a long lens on
top, you really do NEED better than that.
You certainly must know lots of people who have a closet full of
cheap (unused) tripods as I do.
To extend your car analogy, it would be like buying a Jaguar and
then putting it on cheap wheels that are too small and too thin.
The car won't be ABLE to perform at it's best if you make that
compromise.
HTH
--
Cheers,
Joe
Actually the car analogy started with Iver.To use your analogy, why buy a Formula 1 racing car when you only
intend to drive on the public roads?
Sorry for attributing someone else's analogy to you.Actually the car analogy started with Iver.To use your analogy, why buy a Formula 1 racing car when you only
intend to drive on the public roads?
The answer to your question (above) is you wouldn't.
But you said yourself that you don't really like the way the
cheaper gear works. Fine. It's a trade-off, it always is. You pays
yer money and you takes yer choice!
If you like the way any piece of gear works at any price then
recommend it. That's all I did. In my experience, I haven't found
cheaper gear that works for me -- and I've tried over and over
and over again.
I need it to be light and sturdy -- and reasonably priced. For me
that meant a Gitzo 1298 ($375) with an Acratech V2 Ballhead ($279
on special). This combo works for me. Some would find the Gitzo
1298 too flimsy. I had the 1197 first and it was too flimsy, the
1298 works for me. The Acratech head is a bargain IMO -- light and
sturdy.
I also have a much bigger and heavier video tripod which I can use
if need be and a closet full of cheapie tripods that just sit and
collect dust most of the time.
All I said was that you get what you pay for!
Have you read Thom Hogan's piece on tripods? That was me! (well not
me in particular, but you get the idea!) ;-)
--
Cheers,
Joe