I have a Wimberly F-1 bracket that I use to separate my flash/lens to mitigate red eye for night football. But, I need one that is longer. Wimberly does have extensions, but like everything else, they are horribly expensive.
I'd like to take my current bracket to a machine shop and tell them to make me another, but longer.
Anyone ever done anything like this? Was it worth your time? Would a job like this be too small for a shop to mess with?
DennisC wrote:
Would a job like this be too small for a shop to mess with?
Thanks for reading?
Yep, this will be a loss leader even if you can find a shop to do it. I don't like seeing these sorts of jobs come into my shop... impossible not to lose money on it. I'd recommend looking for someone (for instance, a retired machinist who has a small shop in his garage) who mustn't necessarily be concerned with meeting the bottom line. Don't expect him to provide anodizing (will have to be jobbed out) without a stiff cost.
If you don't care how "ugly" it is.... you could take a hacksaw to the main vertical column, and then drill and tap holes in both halves, and then connect with a longer piece of flat aluminum or steel rod. Could even have different rods to make different lengths.
Or you could ask a shop to do that for you if you're not handy or afraid to take a hacksaw to your $200 bracket Form over function for me, so I've done more dramatic things to more expensive equipment haha.
Or I just thought of a less destructive idea- get a shop to take a length of 3/4" aluminum rod, or whatever diameter is convenient, and drill and tap both ends for 1/4"-20. Stick a stud on one side to mount a flash bracket, and stick the other end in the existing mounting spot.
Smiert Spionam wrote:
An extension post from Wimberley is $43. That seems very reasonable, and I can't imagine anyone offering to make you one for less.
My problem is that I need about 3 or 4 of them to get enough separation Red eye is not such a problem to correct in post, but demon eye is darn near impossible.
That said, I'll scrounge around and try some sort of DIY contraption.
DennisC wrote: Believe me, I've thought about a light stand, but not practical running up/down the sidelines.
When I shot sports, I use to mount the flash down low by super clamping it to my monopod. It reduced redeye by getting the flash further from the lens, and also helped to get some light under those football helmets.
I work in a university, and we have our own machine shop in my department. Internal jobs are $22/hr, below cost. Outside our department (but still affiliated with the university) it jumps to $45/hr and are likely at cost. Industry/external jobs clock in at ~$100/hr. I don't think this is abnormal.
So, $43 bucks for the exact part you need/want (if Smiert is correct) seems reasonable to me.
Ben Horne wrote:
When I shot sports, I use to mount the flash down low by super clamping it to my monopod. It reduced redeye by getting the flash further from the lens, and also helped to get some light under those football helmets.