How much weight can a hot shoe cope with
How much weight can a hot shoe cope with
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Discussion

Derek Smith

Original Poster:

47,879 posts

265 months

Friday 26th July 2024
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I've seen a number of photographers with camera handles that fix to the hot shoe of their cameras. I am wondering whether the hot shoe is capable of supporting the camera without damage. I'm thinking that its prime function is for a flashgun. Anyone any knowledge of what weight can be put on the hot shoe? I'm a G9 user.

Tony1963

5,728 posts

179 months

Saturday 3rd August 2024
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I've never seen such a set up, and I doubt I'd ever have a need for it. All cameras will be different, I'd have thought, with some being quite fragile in that area.

Simpo Two

89,511 posts

282 months

Saturday 3rd August 2024
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These must be cameras that don't have tripod sockets...

Tony1963

5,728 posts

179 months

Saturday 3rd August 2024
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Simpo Two said:
These must be cameras that don't have tripod sockets...
But they'll have eyelets to allow the camera to be carried, at the very least. And I'm not sure how many decent cameras have been made without a tripod socket.

Simpo Two

89,511 posts

282 months

Saturday 3rd August 2024
quotequote all
Tony1963 said:
But they'll have eyelets to allow the camera to be carried, at the very least. And I'm not sure how many decent cameras have been made without a tripod socket.
Exactly; why use a hotshoe if there's a tripod socket?

OP - photos?

toohuge

3,466 posts

233 months

Saturday 3rd August 2024
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Derek Smith

Original Poster:

47,879 posts

265 months

Sunday 4th August 2024
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toohuge said:
I was interested in that precise handle.

I'm suffering, and suffering is the word, with RSI in my shoulder and am trying to reduce weight of my camera. I use a cage, liking it for low-level shots that spare my old back and knees. I saw a YT video, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LdrWf7mq9Qg&li... , which went on about a hotshoe handle, and I was a bit concerned.

Anyone with experience?

StevieBee

14,318 posts

272 months

Monday 5th August 2024
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Assume the purpose is video rather that stills.

The only thing that should fit to a hot shoe (IMO) is a flash gun/light, microphone or remote control unit.

A cage rig will add a little weight but the trade-off is the ability to add handles for which many types and permutations exist that will make handling the camera more easy on your joints and not risk damaging the camera. Something like this.

https://www.wexphotovideo.com/smallrig-advanced-ki...




Byker28i

77,337 posts

234 months

Monday 5th August 2024
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Derek Smith said:
toohuge said:
I was interested in that precise handle.

I'm suffering, and suffering is the word, with RSI in my shoulder and am trying to reduce weight of my camera. I use a cage, liking it for low-level shots that spare my old back and knees. I saw a YT video, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LdrWf7mq9Qg&li... , which went on about a hotshoe handle, and I was a bit concerned.

Anyone with experience?
I had similar after a while, went with a Peak Designs Clutch on my SLR, unclip the PD shoulder strap use the Clutch, with the advantage I could clip on the strap back on again if needed
https://uk.peakdesign.com/products/clutch