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Thread: Quick Release for 8x10

  1. #1

    Quick Release for 8x10

    I currently use a Gitzo 1570M head and Gitzo 1385 quick release to support my 8x 10 Wisner. I am happy with the head, and get great support when I don't use the quick release. With the quick release, however, the camera shakes (rocks back-an d-forth on the quick release) because the contact area between the plate and the camera is too small. I would like to go without the release, but I attaching th at huge camera to the tripod head is difficult, and I am afraid I will fumble th e camera someday if I don't use the release.

    Here is what I want from a quick release: a large contact area, not compromise o n stability when using the release, a release that won't mar my camera's finish, and a release I can screw-in by hand (no hex screw). I don't want to leave the release permanently attached, because the rubber base of another quick release m arred the finish of my 4x5 Wisner. The black color absorbed into the wood.

    So, what quick release should I get? Or do you have any tips on safely attaching a large camera to the head, so I can go without a quick release? I would rather not use a quick release, but I can just see my camera hitting the ground someda y if I don't.

  2. #2

    Quick Release for 8x10

    hi william, one possibility for your gitzo 1570m would be to fix two quick release behind each other and to use the lager adpter from gitzo for that.

  3. #3

    Quick Release for 8x10

    I have a Gandolfi 8x10 and I find it very easy to put in the 1570M, my procedure is to tilt the pan head all the way forward and screw the camera in. Takes me 1 minute to do, but if you are set on using a quick release, I would use a Linhof, it has a bigger surface area than the Gitzo and you can screw it to the camera with a hex key, it will never move....:-) I hope this helped.

  4. #4

    Quick Release for 8x10

    Jorge,

    Thanks, it is easy to attach the camera the way you describe (and without a quick release). I always tried the mount the camera with the head in a horizontal position.

  5. #5

    Join Date
    May 2001
    Posts
    50

    Quick Release for 8x10

    machine your own quick release plate. I used 6061-T6 aluminum, which should be soft enough to prevent marring and there's no paint to speak of.

    I had to make one for the Bogen 3030 pantilt head I used for my Sinar F. While the Head itself is fine for supporting the camera, the flimsy little quick release plate they give you doesn't mate to the very bizarre Sinar tripod base, which has strange prongs and other things sticking out which don't let it mate properly, let alone the fact that generic plates let your 16" long camera spin around on the plate, making the whole assembly precarious beyond belief.

    Bogen uses 75-80 degree dovetails for their quick releases. I don't know why they use such a steep dovetail.

    [IMG][/IMG]

  6. #6

    Quick Release for 8x10

    By your criteria, I'm not sure anybody makes a quick release with that amount of surface area, or a non-hex wrench attachment. I can tell you this howerver, the Linhof Quick-Fix II, the largest of the Linhof units is the finest I have ever seen in terms of convenience and stability. First, the Linhof units are not 'cast', but machined. This gives you a level of precision that 'cast' units cannot achieve. I use my #II unit on a twin-shank pro, Linhof tripod, and I have friends who use the same unit on 8X10's. Also, the Linhof Quick-Fix II unit is incredibly tight. Fixing this unit on a tripod with the long member of the #II plate in parallel with your long axis of your view camera should give you excellent stability. Everything is a compromise in this arena. If you really want the ultimate camera fixture, use the criteria that Ansel Adams gave me, over dinner in 1957 when he was in Honolulu to photograph the annual report for Bishop National Bank. Over dinner he said to me.."The perfect tripod is a cubic yard of solid concrete with a 1/4" X #20 bold head sticking out of the top." (:-) Richard Boulware - Denver. P.S. Last time I looked, B&H had a special, very discounted price on the Linhof Quick-Fix II units.

  7. #7

    Join Date
    Sep 1998
    Location
    Loganville , GA
    Posts
    14,409

    Quick Release for 8x10

    There are 2 versions of the Quickfix 1 and II.

    The current one has a silver release lever on top of the base plate. The original version had a red lever on the bottom of the base plate.

    The original one will not mount to some Linhof tripods/heads due to the position of the red lever and it would not sit flat if placed on a table.

    The current version eliminates these problems.

    Camera plates from the original versions do not fit the current ones without a slight modifiation.

    Camera plates for the current version fit the original version as well as the current version.

  8. #8

    Join Date
    Sep 1998
    Location
    Loganville , GA
    Posts
    14,409

    Quick Release for 8x10

    "will not mount to some Linhof tripods/heads"

    Should read some non Linhof tripods/heads

  9. #9

    Quick Release for 8x10

    Thanks everyone, but I don't need a quick release anymore. Jorge solved my problem.

  10. #10

    Join Date
    Dec 1997
    Location
    Baraboo, Wisconsin
    Posts
    7,697

    Quick Release for 8x10

    I use a Bogen Heavy Duty 3057 head and quick release plate with my Deardorff 8x10. It works very well. The quick release plate is square and quite large, probably 3" x 3" or thereabouts. The head is heavy - around 4 pounds as I recall. Kirk also makes a very large - probably 4" x 4" - plate that will fit on an Arca style head if you like ball heads. I have the Kirk plate but no longer use it since I decided to stop using ball heads with large format cameras. I used to use it with a 4 x 5 camera and it worked particularly well because it's so large that the camera could be moved forward and backwards in the clamp to keep longer and shorter lenses centered over the tripod head.
    Brian Ellis
    Before you criticize someone, walk a mile in their shoes. That way when you do criticize them you'll be
    a mile away and you'll have their shoes.

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