I have been trying to find a source for a round tripod mount for a wooden camera. I have attached a photo of the type of mount I am looking for and if any member can help with a source it would be greatly appreciated.
I have been trying to find a source for a round tripod mount for a wooden camera. I have attached a photo of the type of mount I am looking for and if any member can help with a source it would be greatly appreciated.
I am looking for 8 and the maximum diameter should be 1 1/2 inches. I am building some point and shoot 4 X 5, 5 X 7 and 4 X 10 wooden cameras. Thanks for the replies.
There are two types of T-Nuts you can get from a good hardware store, one has the prongs that stop rotation by going into the wood, but there is another that has holes for woodscrews that hold it in place...
The decision you will make is that most of the T-Nuts are mounted underneath the wood, and the threaded part has to be the right depth to match the (tripod head?) screw... But some can be mounted to the surface of the wood...
The type shown in the pix are available some places if you look carefully around... (VERY good hardware stores, marine supply, furniture part suppliers, etc???)
Good luck!!!
Steve K
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Skink-tripo...-/381527993716
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Zak Baker
zakbaker.photo
"Sometimes I do get to places just when God's ready to have somebody click the shutter."
Ansel Adams
Simon, Skink photo on ebay sells them, probably others too. https://www.ebay.com/itm/Skink-Heavy...IAAOSwqYBWo0FT
Roger
Yeah, what Zak said.
Thank you! Just what I want.
The Skink tripod socket has the disadvantage of mounting on the outside surface of the camera with three tiny screws. Non-photographer engineers underestimate the strain imposed by a large camera on the tripod. Much stronger is an ordinary hardware store T-nut mounted from the inside of the camera with the threaded part extending through to the outside. The threaded sleeve can be filed down to be flush with the outside surface of the camera, or a hole for the flange be cut to seat the T-Nut deep enough for the threads to reach the bottom. As LabRat noted, T-nuts are available with prongs or screw holes. Use the latter.
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