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robertdierschke

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  1. I have considered some type of heavy duty clamp system, but I honestly don’t think it will work very well with my chair. There is no “clampable” spot on the front that would work.It is an electric wheelchair so I have to keep the control panel clear. If it is possible it would be good for fast operation. I am looking at a tripod that has a 90 degree joint on the center post. There would be the possibility of tipping, but sandbags should prevent that. I think this would be the best solution for my particular needs.
  2. Thanks for your reply. I had looked at some options on-line, but I had been hoping for some some “out of the box” solutions. The standard ‘google’ items are tripod with a boom-type arm or a ‘magic arm’ that clamps to the chair, Of the two, I am favoring the boom set-up. Anyone have experience with that set-up? I shoot with a D3 Nikon so the weight can be a factor. Add a big lens and weight would certainly be problematic. I suppose that is why sandbags are useful. Robert
  3. Is there such a thing as a tripod that works better for a wheelchair bound user? Due to numerous healht problems I will be in a wheelchair for life. I have gotten back into photography. So far, I have been shooting hand-held and with a monopod when needed. I can stand for very brief periods, but would prefer seated. Perhaps, some sort of a boom/gimbal set-up? Ideas? Monopod is ok, but it is a pain to not be able to stand it up when I need to move around. Plus I have to recompose every time. Currently I mainly shoot in my backyard but I would like to get back to shooting portraits on a limited basis. Robert
  4. I may also may just pick up a couple more newer lenses and hang on to it.
  5. I bought it at a local pawn shop. I have gotten some bargains there over the years. This camera had been owner by a professional photographer. It was not cosmetically pleasing which influenced the price. It had been mechanically flawless until now.
  6. I bought the D3 for just under $800.00 USD 1 1/2 to 2 years ago. I have had that much use out of it. It was a vast improvement over the D2X I sold at that same time. I will contact Repair for an estimate and take it from there. BTW the reason it fell is that I am wheelchair bound and after I had put it on the table I turned my chair. The rear of my chair shoved a camera bag which then caused a tripod to pivot, which in turn pushed the camera off. If I didn't know better, I would say Rube Goldberg had a hand in it.
  7. I have various lenses with the aperture ring and none of them work on the D3 -- only the DX lens. All are set to minimum aperture and all work on my D200 body. If I put an extension tube on it without a lens it will fire, but when I attach a lens on it I get the fEE. The tab is rotating freely.
  8. I knocked my D3 off a table. Now it gives the fEE code for all my older aperture ring lenses. It works fine with a newer DX lens with no aperture ring. Is there anything I can try or is it time to send it in?
  9. Topic for a photo club meeting was 'faceless portraits.' This fellow has modeled for me before. My plan was to shoot it in studio, highlighting the tinted hair and darkening his face. As I explained this to him, he stepped off my patio into the sun.

    © (C)2016 robert dierschke

  10. robertdierschke

    Lillies

    Local lily garden shot just before dusk. Tint applied in Affinity.

    © (C)2016 robert dierschke

  11. I waited a long time for this guy to trust me enough to come close. Fill flash off camera Godox AD200, no modifier.
  12. Male northern cardinal feeds his mate. Shot from my back patio.
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