It is true that technology has brought about many significant changes in this field of photography but we can still enjoy the good old tricks. While traveling we come across such amazing things which we need to preserve through photographs.
A Busman’s Holiday; Thoughts On Quality, Price, And Longevity While On A European Factory Tour Page 2
Because it's easy and cheap to cast pot metal very accurately, you can build a remarkably precise tripod for very little money. At least, it will be precise for a while, but it will also wear rapidly. You can plan for this by inserting spring washers, which will actually accelerate wear, while disguising it for longer than the penalty exacted by that acceleration. A tougher, harder material, machined for accuracy, puts the price up again.
Dr. Hubert Nasse |
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Similar considerations apply to legs and leg locks. Both the quality of the
materials and the precision of manufacture will greatly affect durability, both
in general wear and tear (especially important with leg locks) and resistance
to more serious knocks and drops.
An interesting point here, which I learned at Manfrotto, is how carbon-fiber
leg tubing is made. Essentially, it can be rolled round a mandrel, or spun.
The latter is vastly stronger, and (surprise, surprise) much more expensive.
What is more, the thickness of each layer, and the way it is laid down, can
have a very considerable effect on strength and the wall thicknesses needed.
You will not be astonished to learn that thinner, stronger, more durable tubes
cost more.
But if you're using carbon fiber to reduce weight and increase strength
and durability, instead of as a marketing ploy, top-quality spun tubing is essential.
The difference in weight between a cheap tripod and an expensive one is often
spectacular, and this is true whether you're talking about carbon fiber
or light alloy. If the weight difference is not significant, the differences
in strength and durability are likely to be even more spectacular. A cheap tripod
can be heavy and durable or light and flimsy; but if you want a light, durable
tripod, it's not going to be cheap.
Closely related to build quality is reparability. Gitzo sells, for example,
leg-locking collars, because they might wear out in a few decades. For the same
reason, spare parts are available from Manfrotto and (it must be said) others,
too. The least expensive manufacturer I know with a deliberate policy of reparability
is Cullmann in Germany. Although from personal experience you need Cullmann
parts more often, bear in mind that it took two or three years of hard professional
use to wear out the leg locks on the one we bought in the '80s, and the
parts for that very tripod are still available. With light amateur use, you
might see a decade or two.
Ruin, Slovenia |
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In other words, you can take three superficially similar tripods, each doubling
or even tripling in price relative to the next one down, and when they are new,
you won't necessarily see much difference, though the more expensive one
will probably be a bit more elegant, a bit easier to use, and significantly
less festooned with unnecessary weight-adding "features" such as
a geared center-column drive on a lightweight tripod.
The real difference, though, will come 10 years down the road, or 20, or even
50, when you'll still be using the top-flight tripod. If you went for
the cheapest, sooner or later you'd spend a lot more than the price of
the expensive one in replacement tripods, while with the mid-range one, you'd
spend at least as much on spares and repairs as the difference in price between
it and the expensive one (and any spares you need for the expensive one).
Of course, tripods aren't the only illustration of the old proverb that
"quality doesn't cost--it pays." Top-flight optics are
another: many people are still using decades-old Zeiss lenses on Hasselblads
with digital backs, and the oldest Leica lens I regularly use (including on
my digital M8) dates from the '30s. Bags are yet another example. Frances
and I have actually worn out a couple of bags, wearing through the fabric itself,
but a cheap bag will start to come unstitched and its metal fasteners will fail
long before that. If you are unlucky, the lock or strap will break, and that
can be really expensive.
The list goes on. The few surviving enlarger manufacturers, such as De Vere,
are (and always were) at the top of the market. In a far less expensive realm,
a top-flight cable release is maybe 10 times the price of the cheapest, but
I'm still using one I bought in '66. And I don't know the
age of my Photon Beard focusing spots, but I bought them secondhand some 15
years ago.
It's also true, of course, that if you don't plan on using something
hard, or for long, you may not need the best; but the older you get, and the
more you have to replace things, the more you wish you'd bought quality
in the first place. You might therefore care to ask yourself where it makes
sense to buy the best, and where you can afford to economize. At the very least
it will help you understand where the money goes, and perhaps it will also stop
quite so much of it going quite so fast.
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