View Full Version : Car rigs home made anyone?
has anyone made their own car rigs on the cheap?
I just want to make up a cheap suction pole setup. So a pole comes off the front of the car hangs down so i can do long exposure rolling shots. Anyone made one cheap?
alexisonfire
19-02-2008, 17:58
Youe best bet is getting in contact with liberalis, I believe he has a custom setup as described
Liberalis
22-02-2008, 11:12
I will build one for you, £200 ........ Cheapest to buy elsewhere is about £800, lol
What do you need to know ?
I've been tempted to build one as well - got full workshop facilities (we're classic car restorers) but haven't had much time to myself :)
superstat
22-02-2008, 11:37
My mate on here, Dal, he uses one....think his simple one just consists of his tripod and a few glass suckers and exhaust clamps...
sportysnaps
23-02-2008, 19:57
i don't know if i would put an expensive camera on a home made rig on a moving car - if you decide to buy readymade try here
http://www.b-hague.co.uk/camera%20supports%20systems.htm
they may have what you want - the prices seem good
http://www.fastfilms.co.uk/ sells that kind of equipment
https://sslrelay.com/www.fastfilmsshop.co.uk/sess/utn;jsessionid=1547c089fee5533/shopdata/index.shopscript
https://sslrelay.com/www.fastfilmsshop.co.uk/sess/utn;jsessionid=1547c089fee5533/shopdata/index.shopscript
the suction mount section should be the one of main intrest and accessorys
Keltic Ice Man
23-02-2008, 20:33
Having seen shots of Liberalis rig I wouldn't call them home made. Looked an excellent piece of kit.
And we've seen some cracking shots from it.
Liberalis
24-02-2008, 11:50
The thing to remember is that that the car will moving at less than walking speed, it does not need to go fast. The following is just from my experience ...
There are 4 parts each as important as the other to get right in building a rig;
1/ How its connected to the car.
2/ The boom or arm section.
3/ The head end, how to connect your camera.
4/ How they all fit together (the tricky bit)
There is 2 main ways of connecting to the car, an under-car kit, using magnets or clamps (good for minimal photoshop, bad for universal fitment and magnet reliability) and suction cups, which will fit 99% of cars but leaves a fair bit to photoshop out.
The boom arm needs to be a fine balance between rigidity, length, weight, and physical size, plenty of trial and error goes into this part alone.
To connect your camera most people use a Manfrotto magic arm combined with a super clamp as its plenty adjustable, and the clamp will fit over most pipe/boom/arm diameter ( I don't use one myself because I can't afford one yet, lol)
The really tricky part is how to connect your suction cups (if thats the method used) to the boom keeping it rigid but also allowing it to be adjustable for both reach and curvature of bonnets or glass etc, an engineering mind comes in handy.
This is just the start, there's then the whole lighting/scenes/photoshopping/camera settings/car sourcing/weather predictions/what to have for breakfast/etc/etc.
Enjoy.
Ps: don't spend loads of cash, if your having problems finding something, let me know and I'll have a think on how it can be done cheaper.
Pps: cheers Keltic
My mate on here, Dal, he uses one....think his simple one just consists of his tripod and a few glass suckers and exhaust clamps...
Here's a picture of my rig and also a picture taken with it.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v232/DemonEscortS/Photography/CarCameraMountcopy.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v232/DemonEscortS/Photography/DSC_0038copy.jpg
The downside to this simple rig is that you can't get the entire car in. and ideally you need a wide angle lense for it to work.
The upside is that it only costs about £12 to make.
And just so that everyone knows, Liberalis is the one that showed me his old rig (which i copied to make this).
I keep meaning to build one like Liberalis's new one but havent had the spare time to really look into it.
those suckers are available from B&Q as glass movement suckers for £ 5 each.
I have one which I've got a ball head mount clamped to for mounting on a car. For some of the pole type shots, I'd want more than one.
They're strong. I stuck one on our works transit van and it wouldn't come off, no matter how hard I pulled or shook it.
superstat
25-02-2008, 13:28
http://www.rent-a-rig.com/rig_en.html
This seems to be an awesome set up....12m! but not pictures...
I'm looking at doing something similar to what you guys are chatting about...maybe we could all pool our knowledge and finds etc...
They're strong. I stuck one on our works transit van and it wouldn't come off, no matter how hard I pulled or shook it.
:lol: Don't know if you meant it but that kinda came across as dry humour and gave me quite a mental image!
Coffee all over the monitor now...
lol :)
They have release levers which let you pull the thing off :)
Escaport
18-03-2008, 12:40
Also check out AutomotiveRigs.com (http://automotiverigs.com/index.html). I don't know how well they work and have never used them, but they look interesting.
I'm using a couple of the Manfrotto suction cups with superclamps and an 1 1/2" aluminum pole to make about a 12 foot boom at the moment.
superstat
18-03-2008, 13:09
They look sweet....$$$
Escaport
18-03-2008, 15:34
They look sweet....$$$
:) That is more $ than a home built option, but darn cheap when you look at the real stuff.
For some wallet reaming goodness, check out these guys (http://www.move-n-shoot.com/). I don't know the price of an actual system, but they are computer controlled near frame accurate moving rigs that can hold a 45kg motion camera setup and move it in multiple planes 10-15m from the vehicle at speeds up to 40+ mph. They are made with carbon fiber and tempered glass (for easy photoshop work). Now we're talking $$$!
lukemedway_uk
01-01-2011, 21:47
To make a car rig you will need the following items:
Manfrotto Avenger F1000 Suction Cups x2
1 1/4" pole - preferably reinforced aluminium
Manfrotto Superclamps Mn035 x3
Manfrotto Magic Arm 143RC x1
Wired or Wireless shutter release (not essential)
Use the the suction cups to mount onto the body of the car (or even the glass from the windscreen if you wish to get a very low angle).
Attach the 035 superclamps to each of the suction cups.
Use the 035 superclamps to clamp the aluminium pole.
At the other end of the pole clamp on the magic arm.
Attach the camera, set exposure to 1/50th shutter priority, push the car from the rear and fire the shutter via remote, or use the timer.
That set up with a long enough pole will allow you to shoot any angle pretty much, although you will need to do a fair bit of photoshop cloning of course.
I hope that helps!
To make a car rig you will need the following items:
Manfrotto Avenger F1000 Suction Cups x2
1 1/4" pole - preferably reinforced aluminium
Manfrotto Superclamps Mn035 x3
Manfrotto Magic Arm 143RC x1
Wired or Wireless shutter release (not essential)
Use the the suction cups to mount onto the body of the car (or even the glass from the windscreen if you wish to get a very low angle).
Attach the 035 superclamps to each of the suction cups.
Use the 035 superclamps to clamp the aluminium pole.
At the other end of the pole clamp on the magic arm.
Attach the camera, set exposure to 1/50th shutter priority, push the car from the rear and fire the shutter via remote, or use the timer.
That set up with a long enough pole will allow you to shoot any angle pretty much, although you will need to do a fair bit of photoshop cloning of course.
I hope that helps!
How much does this cost?
fatty-arbuckle
02-01-2011, 12:23
I used my roofrack "bars"
One attached normally to the top of the car, then placed the other bar on top of the secured one, slid it out to the side of the car. Three jubilee clips to hold the two bars together.
Then a gorilla pod and plenty of duct tape holds the camera to the bar...................:lol:
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