Bescor Mp 101 Manual

Bescor Mp 101 Manual

Top Rated Gear: Bescor MP101 Video Motorized Pan Head. Buy now & save $10. Function: Pan / Tilt, Maximum Load Capacity: 1 to 10 lbs. MP101 Video Motorized Pan Head. RONALD K Bescor makes extension cable. I have installed the control up to 60 feet from the base with these cables. Apr 18, 2012 - The Bescor MP-101 pan and tilt is a great cost effective solution for video and photo setups, but it has several limitations.

Download film naruto shippuden episode 298 sub indo. Equipment reviews maxwell electronic power panner mp- 101 Because such images are so difficult to obtain and because they give the viewer the feeling of being with the animal in immediate proximity, photos of wildlife taken from close distance with wide-angle, standard or short telephoto lenses are much more impressive than the usual shots with a super telephoto lens that most nature photographers do. The usually preferred way to such photos is to hide and wait till the animal comes close enough for the reach of the lens.

I have always admired such images created by other photographers but myself haven't had enough opportunities to practice this kind of wildlife photography so far. Since I usually photograph nature while I am traveling, I have neither time nor equipment for approaching wildlife for a close-up shot. If no hide is available at the location where I am going, I don't bring my own because I never stay there for longer than a couple of hours. This is not because I don't like sitting in a hide or don't want to stalk an animal. It is the programme of the trip, its itinerary, or other circumstances, such as local rules, organization, etc. That just don't allow this.

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If you have already travelled to photograph nature in a country like Tanzania or Costa Rica for as short as just two or three weeks, you would know what I mean. In quite many situations it is impossible to get close to the animal for an objective reason — for instance, if it is dangerous or too shy, or is staying in a place that is not accessible for a human, e.g. Too high on a tree or a rock. Another problem with traditional 'seek-and-hide' close-up photography is that typically only large animals can be photographed this way: A small or medium sized animal, even if it comes close to your hide, will always be still too far for a wide-angle lens. Lee ritenour guitars. Since for wide-angle shots of small animals such as small birds, rodents or reptiles, a camera should be less than in half a meter from the subject, a photographer trying to approach it with a camera will almost certainly scare the animal off before he makes a shot. In industry, military, space, and everywhere else, if a task is too dangerous or impossible to do for a human, they would send a robot.

In wildlife photography, tasks that I outlined above would certainly be suitable for a robot with a DSLR camera but unfortunately none is currently available on the market. A partial solution can be a remotely controlled DSLR camera mounted on a tripod head that is moved by an electric motor. The motor should allow adjustments of camera's view field if the subject moves or lives it completely. The frame composition should be controlled via a small video camera that is sending a picture from the viewfinder to the receiver that the photographer is holding in his hand. This setup is what I am experimenting with, and the tripod head that I am going to review here is its part.