Hello folks, I wanted to share a project I did modifying a Horseman 8x10 monorail into a lightweight version.
The original Horseman 8x10 monorail is a beast. The camera is just shy of nineteen pounds--before a lens is even added!--and has a bit of a design flaw: the 8x10 rear standard is a big cantilevered L-frame that puts a lot of weight way off to the side. When mounted on a tripod the camera has a very strong tendency to yaw sideways from the unbalanced load.
I had an idea that if I removed just the 8x10 frame containing the ground glass and bellows, I could try to mount that one piece on my smaller, lighter 4x5 Horseman monorail camera. In a way I would be making an 8x10 conversion kit from the original camera.
All I needed was some kind of adapter to hold the 8x10 frame. I had some spare Horseman 8x10 parts (not from the original camera) that I sent along with my idea to the machinists at S. K. Grimes. Using the parts they made a sturdy new low profile adapter for the old existing 8x10 frame. The adapter has geared focusing and also allows the entire 8x10 ground glass to slide on and off like a quick release. It was a wonderful bit of work! I did lose all back movements, however the camera is now perfectly balanced; no sideways yaw at all.
The old 8x10 bellows for the camera were in bad shape. I had Custom Bellows in England make a brand new 8x10 bellows for the camera. They did a superb job with the new set and it took less than a month to create. Very nicely the new bellows lie extremely flat and are much, much more compact than the old bellows set.
By far the biggest bonus of doing all this is that I now have a 8x10 camera that weighs in at twelve pounds instead of nineteen. Even better, to switch from 4x5 to 8x10 is only a matter of removing the rear standard of my 4x5 and sliding the 8x10 parts onto the rail. The 8x10 frame with the ground glass and bellows attached is stored in a soft pouch alongside my main 4x5 camera. This makes it handy as the swap from 4x5 to 8x10 while out photographing takes but moments with a minimum of bulky parts!
If anyone reading this has an old Horseman 8x10, this is a pretty neat project.
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