Budget Tripod?
Author
Discussion

Dan_1981

Original Poster:

17,987 posts

223 months

Monday 8th December 2014
quotequote all
I know I know - really should spend more etc etc.

Is it plausible to get a decent tripod for circa £50?

Have seen this one (below) which does seem to get positive reviews but I know at this price point i'm not going to be getting the best.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Hama-Traveller-Compact-Pro...

tenohfive

6,276 posts

206 months

Monday 8th December 2014
quotequote all
You'll easily get a good quality second hand Manfrotto or similar on eBay at that price. Think I paid £40 for mine a couple of years ago. It's heavy, bulky and I can feel every gram when I'm dragging it up a mountain for a wild camp somewhere - but it's reliable and bullet proof. I wouldn't think twice about getting one second hand again.

zcacogp

11,239 posts

268 months

Monday 8th December 2014
quotequote all
Red Snapper are meant to be OK and are very well priced.

http://www.redsnapperuk.com/camera-accessories/Tri...


Oli.

Pints

18,450 posts

218 months

Monday 8th December 2014
quotequote all
You can get a Manfrotto from Currys for £50.

andburg

8,592 posts

193 months

Monday 8th December 2014
quotequote all
Costco currently have a manfrotto MKC3-H01 for around £25 iirc....dont have my receipt from when i bought mine

andrewcliffe

1,462 posts

248 months

Monday 8th December 2014
quotequote all
With tripods, you can get two of the three statements, but getting all three is difficult.

CHEAP / STURDY / LIGHTWEIGHT

You can get cheap, light tripods, but they're not sturdy
You can get cheap and sturdy tripods, but they're heavy
You can get sturdy and light tripods, but they're expensive.


GuyW

1,114 posts

227 months

Monday 8th December 2014
quotequote all
I think they're just shifting old stock now as they're being phased out but if you're quick (and have access to a Costco!) they're knocking out the manfrotto 190xb & 804rc2 head combo.
£60.

Can't beat that.

ecsrobin

18,532 posts

189 months

Monday 8th December 2014
quotequote all
Buy cheap buy twice.

That's certainly my experience, I thought £40 was a good price for a tripod then soon realised after a couple of months of use that it was not adequate for use.

So I then had to spend £160 on a giottos tripod and have been happy ever since.

steveatesh

5,316 posts

188 months

Monday 8th December 2014
quotequote all
ecsrobin said:
Buy cheap buy twice.

That's certainly my experience, I thought £40 was a good price for a tripod then soon realised after a couple of months of use that it was not adequate for use.

So I then had to spend £160 on a giottos tripod and have been happy ever since.
Plus 1.
I bought a cheap tripod and after 12 months replaced it with the Manfrotto 055XPROB because I was sick of long exposures being ruined by a passing car or wasp.
Really heavy to lug around, but I reframe that to say it's saving me on gym membership smile

Simpo Two

91,532 posts

289 months

Monday 8th December 2014
quotequote all
steveatesh said:
I bought a cheap tripod and after 12 months replaced it with the Manfrotto 055XPROB because I was sick of long exposures being ruined by a passing car or wasp.
Really heavy to lug around, but I reframe that to say it's saving me on gym membership smile
Plus you can pretend you're carrying a small Gatling gun for extra man points.

(fellow 055ProB owner here)

SlidingSideways

1,345 posts

256 months

Tuesday 9th December 2014
quotequote all
zcacogp said:
Red Snapper are meant to be OK and are very well priced.

http://www.redsnapperuk.com/camera-accessories/Tri...


Oli.
For the handful of outings it gets a year, I've been very pleased with mine. I did go for the more expensive 3-way head (ooh-err!) rather than the cheap bundled one based on what others had said about the step up in quality.
It's not exactly light, but not so heavy that you can't lug it around on a days hiking.

Malx

871 posts

228 months

Tuesday 9th December 2014
quotequote all
I also bought a cheap tripod and soon found it to be useless. I spent about £80 on a RedSnapper RSF-284 & RSH-61 Ball Head which i think is brilliant for my uses. It's sturdy enough to not shake and light enough to carry around. One leg also detaches so i have a handy monopod if needed.

The head did break but RedSnapper were brilliant and sent a replacement out quickly, no questions asked.

Although the tripod is far from top of the range It'll do for a long time before it needs upgrading.

marctwo

3,666 posts

284 months

Tuesday 9th December 2014
quotequote all
If you want something small and light you can get this Carbon Fibre one from Amazon for £55:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/AmazonBasics-Lightweight-T...

Golaboots

369 posts

172 months

Wednesday 10th December 2014
quotequote all
Old pro stuff is the way to go IMHO. Cheap, heavy, sturdy.
It's comparatively against younger models but that just means it's better in the wind/sea/river.

Dan_1981

Original Poster:

17,987 posts

223 months

Thursday 11th December 2014
quotequote all
Taken a punt on the Redsnapper - reviews and feedback seem good.

My previous one was nothing particularly expensive and has given me a fair few years service.