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p.1 #8 · RRS Portrait Perfect Package | |
For George's second picture, which I called the RSS way, the dovetail that is part of the flash package is pointing forward and backward. So if you went from landscape with the L bracket dovetail aligned left to right, and rotated the camera to portrait orientation, the dovetail would not go into the quick release without releasing the ball head, and rotating the quick release 90 degrees, and re clamping. Plus you loose your ball head aim, which slows you down even more. Not a smooth and fast operation, and requires a third hand to do with out putting the camera down, or remembering to rotate the ball head before un clamping the camera. It is doable, but it is not what I want to fight with. I want mixed on tripod and off tripod flash shooting to be fast and simple, so I can concentrate on the shots and the exposure issues, and not need to think about the steps it takes to go back and forth from portrait to landscape.
My added adaption dovetail plate is hard to explain, and I do not have an easy way to give you an actual photo right now. So I will do my best with words. This is for a camera that is high at the bottom, like a 1D series, or a camera with a battery pack/grip on it. You have a quick release clamped on to the bottom of the camera. You have a flat piece of aluminum bolted to the bottom of the quick release that sticks forward. You have a medium length multi purpose rail mounted on top of the piece of aluminum, using additional spacer plates as required, to get the multipurpose rail to the correct height so that when you clamp the curved arm on it, the lens is centered in the up down direction. You can still adjust the whole thing left and right on the L plate bottom dovetail, to get the centering correct for left and right. And to top it all off, you add a short multipurpose rail on the bottom of the alluminum plate, mounted in the left and right direction, so that the whole thing can drop into a quick release on a tripod that is in the normal left and right orientation for an L plate. It is a bunch of stuff, and requires planning and fabrication, and it is not cheap with three RSS parts involved, but it works for me.
Reaching in from the bottom with the normal RSS configuration is OK if you can get used to it, but it is harder when the camera is on a tripod, because the tripod head is kind of in the way. For me I just kept reaching in from the side for the zoom or focus with my left hand like I have been doing forever, and hitting the side mounted rail, and it drove me nuts. I am too old to learn much new stuff, and I like to build things, so I just went ahead and did it. Not for everyone, but something to think about.
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