May be you might add this as well:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/erik-nl/5015161594/
Heinz
Printable View
May be you might add this as well:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/erik-nl/5015161594/
Heinz
Not a good idea in fact ! these electronic levels are too sensitive and lot of customers are already afraid with bubble level as soon as bubble is no more exactly in the middle, so forget it with an electronic one :biggrin:
Thanks anyway for suggestion :001_smile:
Thx for info, helpful hint.
Heinz
Yes a secure line should be part of standard setup for horizontal panos. I would use small nylon rope for its stretch and give.
Also have both Gigatubes - wired and wireless. Very handy but not necessary in this case and shooting at 90 degree rotations. Plus going this far out, with winds, stablizing poles is very difficult.
Hi Bill, I have the NNR-1, Nikon D7000, Sigma 8mm, and a 14' pole,and have been practicing horizontals, but I am not getting results I am happy with. I am setting the R-1 at -10* and shooting 4 around, then moving to one side and shooting 4 more around. (vertical rotation on all). I am then masking (PTGui pro)
myself out. I am getting lots of stitch lines. Should I be changing the angle of the R-1 for some of the shots?
Bill
First I need to add disclaimer the Fanotec poles have not been stress tested for doing horizontal poles panoramas and as such we cannot recommend or suggest you try this. The equipment I used was not Fanotec but allowed me to test the strength of a carbon fiber pole. And then you need to account for pole bending and movement. That said the workflow for doing horizontal pole panoramas is really no different that doing regular vertical pole panoramas. For your equipment I would suggest doing 4 around with -15 degree tilt down plus one up.
Bill
I have a very sturdy fiberglas painters pole that I installed a 3/8" thread in the end of. When yo say "one up" do you mean away from the pole and myself?