Friday, March 23, 2012

FoodSaver V3020 Vertical Vacuum Sealing System With Starter Kit

!±8± FoodSaver V3020 Vertical Vacuum Sealing System With Starter Kit

Brand : FoodSaver | Rate : | Price : $69.99
Post Date : Mar 23, 2012 16:07:47 | Usually ships in 24 hours


The FoodSaver V3020 Vacuum Sealing System keeps food fresh up to 5x longer based on buying on bulk, on sale and preventing waste. The convenient vertical design saves countertop space, the large, easy-to-read control buttons makes for easy operation, and the two sealing levels are great for different types of foods. The starter kit includes one 11-inch by 10-foot FoodSaver roll, one 8-inch by 20-foot FoodSaver roll, eight 1-quart Heat-Seal bags, and two 1-gallon Heat-Seal bags.

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Thursday, December 1, 2011

Rocketfish 70" Carbon Fiber Monopod RF-MONO70C

!±8± Rocketfish 70" Carbon Fiber Monopod RF-MONO70C

Brand : Rocketfish | Rate : | Price :
Post Date : Dec 01, 2011 07:00:26 | N/A


This monopod features a quick-release plate for easy attachment and removal of your digital camera or camcorder and high-quality carbon fiber tubes for stability and portability.What's IncludedRocketfishTM 70" Carbon Fiber MonopodInner hexagon spannerOwner's manualProduct FeaturesCompatible with most digital cameras and camcorders up to 20 lbs.For wide-ranging compatibility.Lightweight, high-quality carbon fiber tubesProvide stability.Locking ball head and quick-release plateFor easy attachment.Extends up to 70"For precise shooting or filming.

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Rocketfish 70" Carbon Fiber Monopod RF-MONO70C

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

All About Tripods - Or at Least the Affordable Ones

!±8± All About Tripods - Or at Least the Affordable Ones

It came time recently for me to buy a tripod (my Christmas gift from my wife). So I started the research online and quickly discovered that I did not know squat about tripods. I knew I wanted a strong and light tripod. My old one was an aluminum leg, very inexpensive (under ) tripod that I have used for the last eight years. It worked, but it was a little heavy and it was not the most sturdy tripod. I sometimes had to brace it against my leg to keep it from shaking and forget about using it in the wind.

I soon learned that you can have a sturdy tripod, you can have a light tripod and you can have cheap tripod, but you can only have two the three with the "cheap" part going out the window first. Scott Kelby and Joe McNally (two of the best photographers that I follow) recommended Manfrotto Carbon Fiber legs (around 5) and a Really Right Stuff Ball Head (that is the thing on the top that moves and rotates and holds the camera) (another 0+) for a total of over 0. Well I don't know about you, but that is still out of my budget so I had to go looking for some options, not quite as good, but a lot less expensive.

First, we need to look at when you need a tripod.

You need it when it is getting dark or in other low light. You need it when your shutter speed is slower than one divided by the focal length of your lens (oh no, math-see examples below). You need at tripod If you are going to enlarge your photo a lot. The first issue comes when you need to capture a lot of light in aperture and also need a slow shutter speed and high ISO.

The second bullet describes the shutter speed math as an example of a standard 50 mm lens needing more than 1/60th without tripod and on a 500 mm telephoto lens you would need to be 1/500 or faster. The logic is that the longer lens magnifies any vibration in the camera or the way you hold it.

The last is that large enlargements will bring out any little imperfections, including camera shake at the high magnification.

There are two kinds of tripod heads: ball heads and pan heads. The ball head is simplest and provides a full range of movement for your camera. If you tend to shoot quickly or at moving objects you will like a ball head. With pan heads you have multiple locking levers that adjust the pan in different planes of movement to allow you to move the camera on the tripod. Pan heads are quite useful for panoramic shots. The trade-off is speed, it takes more time to unlock and adjust the levers than with a ball head.

For the legs of the tripod you are limited to aluminum or carbon fiber. The aluminum is fairly strong, but compared to the stronger carbon fiber. Aluminum is heavier and carbon fiber is far more costly.

I came down to two options. I wanted a carbon fiber leg and chose a pan head. Because cost was a factor, my budget was in the 0 to 0 area (sorry Scott and Joe). I would love to have one of those 0+ babies, but its just not in the cards until I win the Lottery. I first chose to reject the component tripods where you buy the legs from one company and the heads from another. I wanted an integrated leg/head setup.

My first option was the Sunpak - Pro 523PX 64" Tripod sold on Amazon and at Best Buy. It featured a 64" inch reach and collapsed down to 12". It weighed in at 4 lbs. The pan head was controlled by a pistol grip mechanism that seemed very slick. It retailed for around 9.

My other option was the Rocketfish 65" Carbon Fiber kit, It reached up to 65.5" and weighed in at 5.8 lbs. Rocketfish is owned by Best Buy which sells their tripods exclusively. It listed at $ 150.00. So it came down to one unit that was slightly lighter and more expensive. The other unit was very solid with a sturdy feel and smooth moving levering that tilted to allow both portrait and landscape modes.

Both units would work for me and were within my budget. The Sunpak had a that very cool pistol grip mechanism and the Rockfish seemed more solid. What sold it was the Christmas sale at Best Buy that dropped the Rockfish down to under 0. Well, sometimes you just have to buy the most economical. These are not the only good and reasonable tripods on the market. I urge each of you to do your own research and learn from what you have read on Ezine articles.


All About Tripods - Or at Least the Affordable Ones

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