Anyone use a "pole-cam"?
#1
Posted 17 June 2005 - 12:13 PM
Thanks, Keith
#2
Posted 17 June 2005 - 03:27 PM
Sea and Sea makes a nice bar that can be attached to their handles, which provides a beefy place to attach a pole. A good way to attach the pole is to go to West Marine and get a doodlebug or other kind of adjustable head brush. Remove the doodlebug or brush head and bolt the handle and head assembly to the bar on your housing.
The simplest way to release the shutter is to mount an eye-bolt to the handle near where you hands are and run a piece of non-stretchy string down to your shutter release. Drill a small hole through the release to tie the cord and route the string so that when you pull it activates the shutter. Don't pull too hard!
This is the way Jim Abernathy had his simple pole-cam set up and it worked really well for him.
Cheers
James
Dual Ikelite Strobes
Photo site - www.reefpix.org
#3
Posted 17 June 2005 - 09:32 PM
Keith
#5
Posted 18 June 2005 - 02:58 AM
#6
Posted 18 June 2005 - 04:21 AM
Alex
Alexander Mustard - www.amustard.com - www.magic-filters.com
Nikon D4 (Subal housing). Olympus EPL-5 (waiting for housing).
#7
Posted 18 June 2005 - 07:29 AM
Brian Cripe
Canon 1DmkIII, 1DsmkIII
#8
Posted 18 June 2005 - 09:13 AM
Sea & Sea strobes
www.underthecaribbean.com
#9
Posted 18 June 2005 - 10:05 AM
I was surprised at just how much my camera rig weighed when attached to the end of a 12' pole (and my Subal is actually one of the lightest housing in the market). Make sure you don't skimp on the pole. I purchased an aluminum telescopic pole used for cleaning pools (HomeDepot) to which I made multiple reinforcement modifications. I also have a line connected to the housing in case something fails (DAN doesn't cover if I drop the housing 1000ft.).
For the electronics, I simply soldered the plug on a $15 Canon aftermarket remote switch (much better than Canon's $40 cra#py alternative) to a female end plug that mates with the bulkhead's. I then wired 12 ft of cat5 cable (last minute thing) to an Ike sync cord and wired the remote to the other end. If you want something a little more elegant and durable you can probably have Ike custom-build you a sync cord with however much cable you need.
I'm in the works of running the other two wires from the video out on the camera through the same sync cord to a small external LCD. It might sound like overkill but for just a few bucks I think it saves me the trouble of verifying the composition and lets me make real-time changes without pulling the whole rig out of the water.
ONE WARNING -- Make sure no one is standing behind you (especially on a boat) when you're using the polecam setup. Luckily the folks on the shark trip had quick reflexes (ie. Brian Cripe. LOL!) otherwise I'm sure I would have pole-swiped a couple of them.
It's a lot of fun and the results so far have been pretty good. Best of all, you can keep your distance from those sharp teeth! Sure beats getting bi&tch-slapped by a Tiger shark (James?!?! LOL).

Laz
Soap box: TheLivingSea.com
#10
Posted 18 June 2005 - 10:24 AM
A safety cable should be attached to the housing in case of severe bi&tch-slapping by a Tiger shark
regards
www.vizart.ca
www.aquatica.ca
Aquatica Pro Digital housings for D-300s, AF 10-20mm, AF 10-17mm, AF 14MM, AF 17-35mm, af 17-70mm, AF 20MM, AF 60MM, AF 105MM, 2x Ikelite Ds 160, and TLC arms exclusively
#11
Posted 18 June 2005 - 10:27 AM

And here's why a string trigger won't necessarily work -- sometimes the poles are really long, and you need two hands to hold on and yank the thing up when a shark tries to eat it:

One image taken with the setup (blurry!). I nearly lost the camera here:

I did what Laz did. Ike *may* create a custom cable for you, but he won't be happy about it.
Note that Watt uses the metal hotshoe on his Sea & Sea housing to connect a ULCS ball that he uses for his pole cam. Not the smartest method, in my opinion, but he still gets the shots .
#12
Posted 18 June 2005 - 10:30 AM
This is similar to what Jim Abernethy uses for his setup (except that he had a bar machined that bolts across his handles, so the rig is right-side up). However, I found that it only works if you're planning on floating the housing on the surface. A heavy housing and strobe setup can do bad things when mounted using plastic!Here a drawing I did that uses the base of an old boat vhf antenna, this set up is fairly easy to set up and come across, is light and adjustable...
#13
Posted 18 June 2005 - 10:32 AM
www.vizart.ca
www.aquatica.ca
Aquatica Pro Digital housings for D-300s, AF 10-20mm, AF 10-17mm, AF 14MM, AF 17-35mm, af 17-70mm, AF 20MM, AF 60MM, AF 105MM, 2x Ikelite Ds 160, and TLC arms exclusively
#14
Posted 18 June 2005 - 10:38 AM
This is similar to what Jim Abernethy uses for his setup (except that he had a bar machined that bolts across his handles, so the rig is right-side up).
Jim actually uses a bar that Sea and Sea makes, it will work on other housings also depending on handle width - it's Grip Stay part #56450.
Laz forgot to mention one of the best features of his setup - a dome port that belongs to someone else, so you don't have to worry when you stick it in the mouth of a tiger shark
Brian
Canon 1DmkIII, 1DsmkIII
#15
Posted 18 June 2005 - 10:51 AM
Canon folks are lucky in that their cameras have a rempote control port that just takes a 2-wire triger to trip it. Nikon folks aren't so lucky...:-( A few f-mount cameras can be remote controlled via USB or Firewire, but that takes a computer, which isn't practical. I guess it might be possible to use an IR remote and a fiber optic cable.
Cheers
James
Dual Ikelite Strobes
Photo site - www.reefpix.org
#16
Posted 18 June 2005 - 10:59 AM
Yeah -- I used to use that bar, too. But I believe he had a second one machined as well, because the Sea & Sea version was a ridiculous $180 or something. Horribly priced!Jim actually uses a bar that Sea and Sea makes, it will work on other housings also depending on handle width - it's Grip Stay part #56450.
Hmmm. I think I'm confusing machining parts. I think the new part he had machined was a tray adapter to make the 20D work in a D60 housing.
#17
Posted 18 June 2005 - 11:09 AM
I did what Laz did. Ike *may* create a custom cable for you, but he won't be happy about it.
Note that Watt uses the metal hotshoe on his Sea & Sea housing to connect a ULCS ball that he uses for his pole cam. Not the smartest method, in my opinion, but he still gets the shots .
Hehehehe! I wasn't going to mention that part about Ike creating the custom cable. LOL!
Poor Ike has got more than enough things to do especially with his new 90 degree sync cords setup. I wonder when Ike last went on vacation? I'm sure whenever and wherever it was.. there wasn't an underwater housing in sight.
Jim actually uses a bar that Sea and Sea makes, it will work on other housings also depending on handle width - it's Grip Stay part #56450.
Laz forgot to mention one of the best features of his setup - a dome port that belongs to someone else, so you don't have to worry when you stick it in the mouth of a tiger shark![]()
Brian
Oh no... You're gonna get me in trouble with Ryan.
Ryan was actually VERY NICE to let me use his own personal dome as mine didn't make it on time for the trip. As I'm sure Ryan can attest, there wasn't a single scratch or bite mark on his dome. Sheewww!!
Jimmy's setup is really great and it has proven itself to work well. He now even has a similar setup on his new (very heavy) HD camera too. Then again, we were only in 15ft of water. I wonder if either of us would have tried it at one of the many abyssal dropoffs?!?!
Soap box: TheLivingSea.com
#18
Posted 18 June 2005 - 11:18 AM
Eric et al:
Canon folks are lucky in that their cameras have a rempote control port that just takes a 2-wire triger to trip it. Nikon folks aren't so lucky...:-( A few f-mount cameras can be remote controlled via USB or Firewire, but that takes a computer, which isn't practical. I guess it might be possible to use an IR remote and a fiber optic cable.
Cheers
James
3-wires.. 3rd (half press) adds auto focus.
With the D70 and my Olympus 5050 IR remote I semi-rigged a remote trigger using a fiber optic line down to the IR sensor on the camera (good reason to own an Ike housing).
I believe (name escapes me now) there's a company that makes wired remotes for Nikon. They even have some timed-triggered remotes and such. I remember them from when I was going to house my D70. I'll post the url when I find it.
Soap box: TheLivingSea.com
#19
Posted 18 June 2005 - 11:36 AM
Cheers
James
Dual Ikelite Strobes
Photo site - www.reefpix.org
