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Thread: Tripod Schlepping

  1. #1

    Join Date
    Feb 2009
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    95

    Tripod Schlepping


    Looking for a "hard case" for my woodie -- 42" x 7" diameter -- any suggestions?

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Dec 2005
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    El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Ángeles de Porciúncula
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    5,810

    Re: Tripod Schlepping

    I've seen plumbing trucks with lengths of ABS that are capped on each end with removable plugs. I think the intent is to use them for equipment (or smaller pipe) storage/transporation. I don't know if they make sewer pipe in 7 inch diameter but htat's what I'd start looking at if I had your need. Cutting an dgluing htat stuff should be well within almost anyone's capabilities.

  3. #3
    Daniel Stone's Avatar
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    Nov 2009
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    Los Angeles area
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    2,157

    Re: Tripod Schlepping

    any major plumbing supply local to you should be able to help you out here w/ a pipe section and end caps.

    I made one for a trip last year, I was traveling by air. I packed my Gitzo CF sticks in it, and the disassembled head wrapped in bubble wrap/foam at one end.
    worked great, was able to handle the baggage handling system w/ ease over 4 separate flights
    gave it to a friend who was traveling overseas on a job, he still hasn't returned it despite 2 more trips since that time

    cost me about $25 in materials(abs pipe, end caps, eyelet bolts(for the strap), nylon strap material(for said strap), etc. and ~1 hour to make. All sourced in one trip from Home Depot.

    -Dan

  4. #4

    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Luther, OK
    Posts
    192

    Re: Tripod Schlepping

    A tube form for concrete - made of waxed fiber board. Very tough and nowhere near as expensive as large diameter plastic. Make end caps out of wood, paint the outside for better water resistance and you're in business. Big-box hardware stores carry them but in limited choices of tube diameter. Any concrete form and accessory supplier would have whatever diameter you need (up to 8'!) I think a Ries A100 tripod w/A250 head needs an eight inch IIRC. The tubes make excellent shipping containers for long items also. -Chris

  5. #5

    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Tucson AZ
    Posts
    1,822

    Re: Tripod Schlepping

    We used to call them Sonotubes and they came in sizes up to a couple of feet in diameter IIRC. When my wife and I built a large (2k sq ft) deck we bored about 35 footing holes with a Bobcat/earth augur and then set rebar inside the 12" tubes and poured concrete. It was a lot of work

  6. #6

    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Posts
    95

    Re: Tripod Schlepping

    Thanx all -- time to make a road-trip to my local plumbing supply house and/or Home Depot -- gotta love the Forum!

  7. #7

    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Posts
    335

    Re: Tripod Schlepping

    PVC pipe is made in sizes up to 16" that I know of. I use a Tenba soft tripod case with a 8" sonotube inside it. I lined the inside of the sonotube with closed cell foam...AKA a sleeping pad from Walmart's camping department. So far, I've made 6 trips to Las Vegas with this setup and they haven't ruined my tripod yet.

  8. #8

    Join Date
    Apr 2013
    Location
    USA!
    Posts
    258

    Re: Tripod Schlepping

    A golf or snowboard bag on sale might be a good off the shelf possibility....

  9. #9

    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Posts
    335

    Re: Tripod Schlepping

    Uhhhhh...I priced 8" PVC.....20 bucks a foot and the end caps are $38 each. A sonotube (concrete form tube) @ Home Depot in 8" by 48" is $7.25. Plus the shipping on the 8" PVC was nearly $50 ! I only paid $69 for the Tenba tripod case and $6 for the sonotube and $4.99 for the foam pad from Walmart !

  10. #10
    Drew Bedo's Avatar
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    Oct 2006
    Location
    Houston Texas
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    3,225

    Re: Tripod Schlepping

    In maybe 1999 or 2K;


    I had a bad experience with checking a tripod on a airplane. They broke it and much hassle followed (another story). Next time we traveled, I put together a hard case from a cut-off piece of PVC. It had end caps and hefty handles. Bought new it would have been pretty high. I got used pieces from the maintainance shop at a major hospital where I was working.

    After bording a flight and after everyone was settled in, the cabin crew asked me (by name) to punch up my flight-attendent light . . .and so I did.

    A baggage handler found me and asked what was in the big white tube? He was nervous and sweating (it wasn't hot). I told him about it and told him they could openit up if the needed to. that seemed to make him feel better and he assured me that everything was OK and we were good-to-go.

    Soon after that the world changed. After 9/11 my family refused to trvel with me if I packed that rig along. I kinda miss it; It strapped down to a golf bag pull along cart and worked well.
    Drew Bedo
    www.quietlightphoto.com
    http://www.artsyhome.com/author/drew-bedo




    There are only three types of mounting flanges; too big, too small and wrong thread!

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