gilbouk
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- Gil
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I have had a lot of problems securing my Nikon D500 and Tamron 150-600mm for use on a monopod. I currently only have a ball head - and have learnt it's easier to control if you drop the ball into the notch and to side mount the rig allowing for only up and down tilting which is the only plane of movement I require. See the below video - this is the technique I have been trying to use and I've found it much easier to control compared with mounting the camera directly on top of the monopod.
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=edIKz_9Otbc
The only problem is that when doing this the weight of the camera and lens is pulling the ball downward into the notch at a greater angle than 90 degrees - the weight is causing extra friction and the ball does not tilt freely. The only way to get it to tilt easily is to apply a lifting force so that the stock on the ball is closer to 90 degrees to the vertical of the monopod. This is not ideal. Without some lifting force, if you try to tilt the camera up and down, this action loosens the plate off from the foot, as the tilting is along the same plane as the plate is tightened and loosened. So rather than the tilting coming from the ball, it's coming from the twisting of the plate which eventually loosens off completely from the lens collar foot.
My question is - with a higher quality ball head, would it be able to support the weight of my rig without going beyond the 90 degree angle to my monopod which in turn will avoid the loosening action when I try to tilt up and down?
Or is there a collar with a Arca Swiss mount built in which would would remove the 'joint' and only allowing movement through the head?
Or would I best mount vertically with a tilt head instead - so that the tilting doesn't act along the direction the plate is mounted, therefor loosening it off?
Cheers for any advice - really keen to sort out my birding with my monopod without the need to constantly unmount, and tighten up the plate.
The only problem is that when doing this the weight of the camera and lens is pulling the ball downward into the notch at a greater angle than 90 degrees - the weight is causing extra friction and the ball does not tilt freely. The only way to get it to tilt easily is to apply a lifting force so that the stock on the ball is closer to 90 degrees to the vertical of the monopod. This is not ideal. Without some lifting force, if you try to tilt the camera up and down, this action loosens the plate off from the foot, as the tilting is along the same plane as the plate is tightened and loosened. So rather than the tilting coming from the ball, it's coming from the twisting of the plate which eventually loosens off completely from the lens collar foot.
My question is - with a higher quality ball head, would it be able to support the weight of my rig without going beyond the 90 degree angle to my monopod which in turn will avoid the loosening action when I try to tilt up and down?
Or is there a collar with a Arca Swiss mount built in which would would remove the 'joint' and only allowing movement through the head?
Or would I best mount vertically with a tilt head instead - so that the tilting doesn't act along the direction the plate is mounted, therefor loosening it off?
Cheers for any advice - really keen to sort out my birding with my monopod without the need to constantly unmount, and tighten up the plate.
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