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Tripods
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Giotto - new tripods
Introducing the MT92 and MT93 series.

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Help please - I am buying a tripod for my 16 year old nephew who is getting a new digital DSLR camera for his birthday.

I have a limited budget but want to get not only the right tripod but the best value for my money.

Can any one suggest something please.

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Against all odds, I'm going to recommend a visit to Jessops.

Their own Jessops Tripod TP323 is excellent value for money for a full size tripod with a quick release mount.

Jessops tripods are very plasticy and not hugely stable - depends on their useage and weight of camera attached. I'd stick with the sturdier brands that hold much more stably - Manfrotto, Giottos, etc
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Well, I'm not sure where you've got that impression from.

I use mine with a Nikon D80 and Sigma 70 - 300mm  and  Tamron 18 - 200mm lenses and have no problems with it.

Plasticky it ain't.

When I compare the price of the Jessops tripod to the cost of a SLIK professional I used to have until the column handle broke, I still feel that for the first time DSLR owner, the tripod is good value for money.

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Perhaps more than anything in photography, you get what you pay for with a tripod. The difference in build quality between a £50 and a £150 tripod for example is marked. I use a Manfrotto MN055 with a ball and socket head. I bought it from Teamwork about 12 years ago when my previous tripod (a Manfrotto Triaut) finally fell apart.

It fell apart because about a decade beforehand, it fell out of the cargo hold of a plane and hit the apron head first. This 20 foot drop onto tarmac meant it bent one of the arms of the head, chipped the paintwork and damaged the main casting... and it still worked for another ten years. 

That's how solid these tripods are. 

My MN055 is the previous version and I would like to update to the newer leg locks and a central column that turns into a side arm (like the newer models). Trouble is, if it ain't broke don't fix it, and unless this one falls out of a plane or gets run over by a steamroller, I can't see how it gets broken. 

Mike uses a smaller, more modern Manfrotto 190PRO and the same built-like-an-Abrams logic applies. He's also shot on large format using dirty great Gitzos and Manfrottos designed to hold a 5x4 view camera in place. Trouble is, once you've used one of these things, it's hard to look at products like the Jessops tripod without thinking it looks a bit plasticky and lacks stability. 

However, the big issue with any pro-grade tripod is weight (forget price for now... if you are lugging a heavy tripod up a hill, you don't say "my, this tripod's expensive"). The Jessops tripod weighs just over 1.5kg. The 190PRO weighs 1.8kg... and needs a tripod head that might add an extra kilo to the equation. This might not seem like a big deal, but consider these two opposing arguments:

1) Do you really want to lug that extra weight around whenever and wherever you need a tripod (and lug it back afterwards)?

2) If you put your expensive DSLR and lens on a tripod, do you really want one that's lighter than your camera from a centre-of-gravity perspective?  

You need to weigh up which is the bigger 'no'...

If you are still undecided, here's a good test. Place a DSLR and lens on the tripod and extend the legs fully (leaving the centre column unextended). Lock everything down properly and place the tripod on a level surface. Now stick your finger on the camera's hot shoe and 'waggle'. If there's any movement at all, keep looking. A good tripod should also be able to reach about chest height with legs (but not centre column) extended... if you have to extend the centre column to reach more than 4' from the floor, keep looking.

Hope that helps 

And just to throw a spanner in the works, there's Gorillapod SLR - which, whilst "sort of" a tripod, is potentially fun for creative work... Though I've never actually tested one, so don't know weight capacity or reliability - but I've heard reasonably good things.

When you can wrap one around a lamp post and make a 2 second exposure at night for things like car trails and night shots (etc), it's quite a transportable and quirky option. Though you wouldn't see a 'serious' portrait photographer slap one out in the studio... not that it should be ruled out...

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DaveB when I saw you post suggesting a jessops tripod, the same thoughs went though my head as Mike's. Lightweight and plasticy. Must admit that I've not handled a Jessops tripod of late, but the one that I have has a plastic head which is/was (don't use it anymore) far from stable when my Canon 10D + battery drip, 100mm macro with flash attached.

I now use a giottos, but as Alan says you sure know and sometimes wish you where not carrying it, especially when out on the Yorkshire Moors doing a "Gentle" walk with Simon. That's the time you wish you had a Jessops tripod 

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My grateful thanks to everyone who has replied, I was going round in circles and not being a photographer the language in some cases was above my head.

Everything you have mentioned I will now follow up and feel sure I will find something to suit the purse.

Maureen

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Anyone any thoughts on the Velbon range? I bought a CX660 and that seems solid enough.

http://www.tradetalk.com/Images/Products/Normal/31180.jpg



One thing I looked for was a decent sized tubing on the legs.

PS. and for doing things like Harry and Simon does I got an Exped Viewfinder trekking/monopod pole - about £25

http://www.hitchnhike.co.uk/acatalog/exped_viewfinder_pole.jpg



Except that it came FREE with a magazine subscription. Decent stuff all the same.

Edited: 12/09/08 17:57
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Manfrotto for me Jeff everytime mate
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Mr Shredder wrote (see)
Manfrotto for me Jeff everytime mate

Go back to shredding your guitars, Monk.

You're not fooling anyone!

Only time bandits on Council wages can afford Manfrottos.

Edited: 19/12/08 11:05
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none of your mickey mouse velbon rubbish here mate

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