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Thread: How do you carry your monorail camera?

  1. #1

    Join Date
    Dec 2010
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    UK
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    How do you carry your monorail camera?

    Hi

    Just interested in what bags, cases etc people are using to transport their monorail type cameras around in for local shoots? Not for treking long distances over the hills and mountains, but just putting in the back of the car, and then carrying a short distance to take a photo.

    David

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Jun 2002
    Posts
    9,487

    Re: How do you carry your monorail camera?

    I usually just compress the front and back tight and lay into my kid's booster seat in the car. To shoot I mount in on a tripod and swing it over my shoulder, throw holders and extras into a daypack.

    The best cases hold the camera upside down and have notches to hold the rail - the camera is always ready to go, it just needs to be plucked out and tripod mounted. You can also do a Pelican/Halburton/Tenba/Liteware, etc to hold the assembled camera laid on its side in the same manner.

    The cheap way is a plastic Igloo cooler with some home-made dense foam inserts. The expensive way is the Liteware or Tenba View Camera cases that are very nice but HUGE.

  3. #3
    Mike Anderson's Avatar
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    Jan 2010
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    San Diego
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    Re: How do you carry your monorail camera?

    Custom contraption (soft cooler with plastic bin):


    ...Mike

  4. #4

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    UK
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    Re: How do you carry your monorail camera?

    Being rather cheap in spirit I like the idea of the cooler bags a lot!
    Thanks
    David

  5. #5
    Drew Wiley
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    Sep 2008
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    SF Bay area, CA
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    Re: How do you carry your monorail camera?

    I have a big picnic cooler (hard-sided) with a couple struts inside notched out for the
    rail to rest on. Nice for quick car use. Mainly, however, I prefer a large external frame backpack with the bellows part of the camera resting between two Tupperware filmholder boxes, but with a goosedown jacket tucket inbetween. The latter was preferable for architectual sites on steep hillsides, just like real backpacking.

  6. #6

    Join Date
    Jun 2001
    Location
    North of Chicago
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    1,758

    Re: How do you carry your monorail camera?

    I leave mine, a Sinar Norma, on the tripod, wrap the darkcloth around it and strap to to the front of a Sherpa Cart. All the other bits and pieces are in a backpack inside the carry-all bag of the Sherpa Cart.
    ____________________________________________

    Richard Wasserman

    https://www.rwasserman.com/

  7. #7

    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Posts
    2,474

    Re: How do you carry your monorail camera?

    Arca Swiss 6x9 in a home made PVC hard case where the camera -ready to be used - lets the monorail protrude a half of its length. The case weighs 770g, goes easily in my backpack. Can walk with it for hrs and hrs.
    Last edited by GPS; 6-Jan-2011 at 15:04. Reason: typo

  8. #8

    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Ángeles de Porciúncula
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    Re: How do you carry your monorail camera?

    Camera and lenses in a hard case; Hard case strapped to a 2-wheeled luggage carrier. Film holders, filters, and lunch in a backpack.

  9. #9

    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Posts
    791

    Re: How do you carry your monorail camera?

    Found a tackle box for my Cambo. It's all assembled, just lift out and mount on the tripod.

  10. #10
    Moderator
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    Apr 2009
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    Re: How do you carry your monorail camera?

    Foray Mobile Workmate

    (The Office Depot link is not working for some reason--Google it)



    The insert compartment on the left holds about six lenses on Sinar boards. The hard plastic file holder I discarded. The internal divider separates a small area in the back where I put the spare sets of bellows and the Fuji holder, plus the Pentax meter. The big space left in the middle is where the camera goes, with the rail sitting on top of the divider and the lens compartment. The only PITA is getting at the lenses in the bottom part of the separate insert in which I put the lenses. I keep film in the outside pockets. There would be room for four or six 4x5 holders there instead of those. Here's the picture of it with the camera in it from the "Show your camera" thread:

    http://www.largeformatphotography.in...4&d=1257744524

    Rick "who has a conventional Calumet-style case for his Cambo, but it's too big and unwieldy for a compact rail camera like the Sinar" Denney

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