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I would much rather have the plastic and the lens get ripped off by a riser which i have done before . I have only lost one lens and my camera was not damaged at all just slap another lens on it and go. If i had glued a metal ring to it it would have surely torn up something besides!
Just my 2 cents :)
A friend will bail you out of jail , a REAL friend will be sitting next to you in the cell slapping your hand saying "DUDE THAT WAS AWSUM " ................
Just my 2 cents :)
A friend will bail you out of jail , a REAL friend will be sitting next to you in the cell slapping your hand saying "DUDE THAT WAS AWSUM " ................
I had my CX100/baby death resting on a desktop and something got set on top of it, breaking the silver plastic threaded piece on the camera (with the BD, the front of the camera rests ~.25 inches off the ground). After a great deal of (very) careful sealing/bonding/gluing/clamping, my baby death is now permanently fixed to my CX100.
I wish I had documented the process for sharing purposes, but the way I "rebuilt" it should I ever have some riser slap or a collision, that entire piece of plastic will break off, lens and adapter ring and all.
Actually, I would venture to argue that even with metal step-up rings, this is the worst damage the CX100 could suffer (if it's in a good box) in these situations because of how it is built. However I believe whoever made the argument for plastic step-up rings has made the strongest point... it'd be nice to be able to just screw a back-up on and keep going.
I wish I had documented the process for sharing purposes, but the way I "rebuilt" it should I ever have some riser slap or a collision, that entire piece of plastic will break off, lens and adapter ring and all.
Actually, I would venture to argue that even with metal step-up rings, this is the worst damage the CX100 could suffer (if it's in a good box) in these situations because of how it is built. However I believe whoever made the argument for plastic step-up rings has made the strongest point... it'd be nice to be able to just screw a back-up on and keep going.
It's all fun and until someone loses an eye... then it's just a game to find the eye
wwelbon 0
Ya mine fell from less than 2ft, but on to concrete. My century .5 rolled away with the lens mount attached to it. Fortunately nothing else happened to the camera or lens. I'm definitely happy I bought sony's accidental damage warranty, they are fixing it. Not sure if a plastic step up ring would have saved it though. It didn't even seem to hit that hard.
Here is a pic of the aftermath...
Here is a pic of the aftermath...
Hi, you must have two adapter rings on that lens. My Century .5 just arrived in the mail and I now realise I don't have an appropriate adapter. Where do I get a 30-37 or a 30-43?
tia, Jesse
tia, Jesse
wwelbon 0
I called century and they sent me the 30-37 for free! I also bought a 30-43 on ebay but it is actually wider with the two step up rings.
QuoteWhere do I get a 30-37 or a 30-43?
Isn't the B&H Photo site required reading for videographers?
Thought so..
Sky Canyon Wingsuiters
DSE 5
Should it be part of the stickies?
QuoteShould it be part of the stickies?
Just a link would be nice.
However, National Camera has them in stock. I only mention this because I have 2 within 5 minutes of my house.
Birdshit & Fools Productions
"Son, only two things fall from the sky."
"Son, only two things fall from the sky."
When I take mine off, the aluminum ring stays on the camera. I unscrew the lens from the adapter...
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