cphelan 0 #1 October 12, 2009 Just a warning to those who haven't thought of this. I certainly didn't think of it and it ended up ruining all my videos for the MOAB boogie. I am using a cx-100 and a Raynox 3030 lens. I had the 37-30 mm PLASTIC adapter ring that the Raynox 3030 lens provides with it. The first jump of the Boogie we were getting geared up and I happened to bump my knee on the side of lens breaking it from the camera. When I looked at it closer the PLASTIC adapter ring was the piece that broke. Luckily the nothing happened to the lens... PPHHEWW! So my advice is to get a METAL adapter ring. Another one of the jumpers at the boogie has the same setup but uses the Metal adapter ring provided with his the century lens. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
billvon 2,990 #2 October 12, 2009 >So my advice is to get a METAL adapter ring. The risk there is that the camera will break before the adapter ring. People hit their lenses all the time; what part of the system do you want to break? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pattersd 0 #3 October 12, 2009 this is why carrying a spare adapter in the gear bag is a good idea, they are a couple of bucks. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DSE 5 #4 October 12, 2009 I agree. Others make the claim that metal rings will rip the threads from their camera. I've yet to see one in MotoX or skydiving. I've seen metal rings rip from the camera, but no damage to the camera. They're just not that strong, nor that many threads. Most adapter rings are still very cheap aluminum. Only a couple of manufacturers provide solid quality/thicker aluminum rings (Century is one of the few). Aluminum doesn't break down with weather and sunlight either. YMMV. both can have issues. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
LloydDobbler 2 #5 October 15, 2009 QuoteI agree. Others make the claim that metal rings will rip the threads from their camera. I've yet to see one in MotoX or skydiving. I've seen metal rings rip from the camera, but no damage to the camera. They're just not that strong, nor that many threads. Most adapter rings are still very cheap aluminum. Only a couple of manufacturers provide solid quality/thicker aluminum rings (Century is one of the few). Aluminum doesn't break down with weather and sunlight either. YMMV. both can have issues. Additionally, as noted in the recent CX-100 cage discussion, HD video cameras have become fairly inexpensive. With the CX-100 going for $388-ish and HD lenses being $100 or more (depending on how much of a picky vidiot you are...[cough][cough]babydeath[cough][hack])...well hell, it's almost to the point where it makes financial sense to not sacrifice the lens in hopes of saving the camera. Not saying we're there yet, pricewise. But it seems like it's getting a lot more reasonable to think that way, especially when you consider the anecdotal evidence of you having never seen the threads ripped from a camera.Signatures are the new black. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
adamT 0 #6 October 15, 2009 For what its worth i've had a strike to the lens take the lens mount off of a pc105. This was with metal step rings. I still use mental step rings with my cx100 though. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites