New stuff
http://www.personal-view.com/talks/discussion/14964/came-optimus-single-hand-gimbal#Item_1
http://www.personal-view.com/talks/discussion/14963/came-prodigy-gimbal#Item_1
From now on we will try to have one topic for each product
What do folks think of their latest gimbal related products?
http://www.came-tv.com/camesailfish-rc-car-for-gimbals-p-817.html
Glidecam had something similar, a "body pod", mount or a similar name. It didn't work either because of the movement the pelvis/chest introduces. But the idea looks promising. I think mounting a gimbal on an Easy Rig might work better to take the weight. But part of the smoothness is due to the human arms, elbows, wrists absorbing bumps, as well.
A true steadicam actually puts the weight on the operators' hips, with a lot of stability added through the vest and absorption on the adjustable, spring-loaged arm, that's all before gimbal. The height of the Z axis remains very steady due to all of this, and any adjustment of that height is intentional, and not operator movement.
I hope CAME can come up with a load bearing solution beyond this current one or we can see a demo video where the operator actually adjusted that spring loaded mount on the Elastix, to make the rest of the gimbal "float" on the mount and hopefully remove that operator movement, present in the footage.
I once did a big budget job with small DV video cameras. The production bought 2 Steadicam Jr.s so the camera operators, could also do their own Steadicam. We balanced the cameras as well as we could, but, the result were poor. Later we shot part of the movie on S16mm film and a pro steadicam op was hired. He was interesting in the "Jr." never having seen one, and in a matter of minutes was getting smooth results from it. The point is, experience is the key, and it can take more than just learning from your mistakes, but, rather learning from someone who knows more than you do.
(edited for content)
I think mounting a gimbal on an Easy Rig might work better to take the weight. But part of the smoothness is due to the human arms, elbows, wrists absorbing bumps, as well.
This is why the Tilta AmorMan system is so much superior, I've had a go at this and an EasyRig with a gimbal, and while each have their own different sets of pro/cons, I find overall the Tilta approach is nicer.
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/1249617-REG/tilta_arm_t02_armor_man_2_exoskeleton_support.html
http://ikancorp.com/productdetail.php?id=1577
Hope CAME also brings out a similar product one day.
In this case it is much cheaper to get Laing vest + arm for gimbals.
Such system is overkill until you have very large gimbal and work for very long periods.
@Vitaliy_Kiselev agreed! @IronFilm Glad to hear your report. After posting that I started to think it might not work after-all.
This humorous video actually demonstrates why that part of the body, is not doing you any favors to stabilize your gimbal, and how & why the steadicam style arm is the tried and true standard. Just checkout how that little guys head (your camera/gimbal) is bobbing around! https://www.facebook.com/kinotools/videos/863645540409704/
This is a video about troubleshooting with the Came-TV action gimbal for the Gopro. Entirely not Came-TV's fault but mine, because I carried it wrong. But I found rather good solutions and workarounds for the problems that might help, if you are facing these problems too.
At 9 minutes in you can spot the new Came TV RC car for gimbals:
http://www.came-tv.com/camesailfish-rc-car-for-gimbals-p-817.html
It was announced a while ago, I think, not new.
At least we saw it at IBC clearly and I knew about it long before IBC.
PV Mini 3 videos
Mini 3 seems like good gimbal. But CAME need to cut price a little.
Can same good mini3 owner tell me what are the default sensors axis positions settings both ACC and gyro? I need to get this thing set correctly at last and this is a good first step to have correct. Thank you
thanks Vitaliy I found full serials of them was hope im doing samething wrong in basics and this will fix my problem... but not :)
CAME-TV Elastix Unboxing
CAME-TV Elastix Gimbal Support Review
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