This will be very helpful to people who is interested in getting to know steadicam as there isn’t much videos like this on youtube. Good stuff. Thanks!
I can't foresee any situation where I'll ever use one of these things but it was enjoyable and impressive just to see the complexity of it demonstrated. Glad that I randomly thought I'd look up how this works for some reason!
I am pleasantly surprised to find a young operator who actually knows what he's talking about. You know about static vs dynamic balance and you clearly demonstrate drop time. You make clearly visible adjustments. Use of the docking bracket and your multi part video clearly illustrates proper technical methodology. PS: Balance on the CP ENG rig took me anywhere from 30-45 minutes.
Holy hell.....I never thought about just how much goes into properly weighing a fully rigged professional setup. Thank you for doing this man. It gives so much scope to those interested in pursuing film as a fulltime job Keep doing what you're doing!
@@SteadiRed Thank you brother....consistency will yield the end results. All that's needed is motivation and passion (which you seem to have). Again thank you for going through the Eazy cam. I seldom get to see how it's setup (nevermind rigged).
I don’t have a steadi cam as yet. But I’m definitely applying this knowledge for when I do. I have a mini steadicam but the goal is to get to your level. You’re my teacher man! Thank a lot! Very informative video.
i know Im asking randomly but does anybody know a tool to get back into an instagram account..? I somehow lost the password. I would love any tricks you can give me!
@Kenzo Markus I really appreciate your reply. I found the site thru google and I'm waiting for the hacking stuff now. Takes a while so I will get back to you later with my results.
Red, I really enjoy your content. Very comprehensive and the pacing is perfect. A really good benchmark for TH-cam tutorials. (also: love your sense of humor!) Keep up the great work
Thank you for this. I just bought my first steadicam (though not the brand. A Came-TV Stabilizer) and there are a lack of videos for me to do research on this and get it right so I don't hurt anyone or myself. Great resource I hope it gets more views.
Thank you for an approachable tutorial that is a good entry point for someone not yet ready to commit to the full expense of a rig or the workshops. One of the big questions coming from the outside is wether one can start on low-end rigs and learn from there, or if the workshops followed by purchasing at least $10,000 of gear is the only way, which the content found online from many seasoned operators would seem to suggest. I am definitely not "buy and M1 and take gold workshops" committed to learning yet, but with your guides, the book, and second hand mid-to-entry level stuff that can be found online, I am seriously considering giving steadicam a go!
Thanks so much! you can definitely start with something smaller and build your way up. the skills you learn on a small rig will transfer to a big rig so it is a smart plan especially if your not sue if you want to fully commit to it.
Thanks for the tutorial. I don't believe I'll ever use one of these, or have a use to know this information, but I enjoy learning how tech works and really appreciate your knowledge in this gear. Thanks again!
Solid video man! Thank you for sharing. My workshop got pushed cause of everything going on and so it's nice to get reacquainted with the basics from another Operator. Hoping you keep the series going!
thanks red for your videos they are very good .. I think the big secret in this is the volt. I have a steadicam without the volt and the operation is much more erratic. Maybe you should clarify it because I happened to see your video and not understand why it did not achieve the same stability and it is a bit frustrating, until I saw that you had the volt ... anyway I recognize that your ability is magnificent. I saw all your videos and they are excellent. I loved the comments-reviews on the movies you make. Congratulations.
Nice job Red! So let me get this right..... #1 Always look cool and #2 Twist and Slide (cuz she likes it) . Hehe! Loved the comedy bud! Again, great job on the video!
Just bought a small Steadicam for my Sony Camcorder at work and after watching this and your second video, I learned so much. Thanks for doing this. What stand do you use for assembling the rod?
awesome! glad i could help. i use the american grip steadicam stand but it is overkill for most things. if your rig is small enough you can get a lighting stand
The twisting movement makes it slide easier! That's what she said lmfao! I was referring to a real steadicam balancing to build my own out of osmo4 with 3ft boom now I'm cutting wooden weight plates out of ply wood to attach to bottom of boom arm with 1/4 20 bolt.
Wooww my too,say Amazing and nice tutorial,we have steadycam M2 now,but very difficult to learn and practice this gimbal,what is different both M1 and M2,thx before Steady red
Love this video! Dynamic balance has been an absolute pain to achieve for me however. I’m not sure what I’m doing wrong. I get close and then all of sudden am right back to where I started. Do you have any advice for Dynamic balance?
Thanks! You might be making too big of adjustments and keep going too far back and forth. But my best advice would be not to worry about it too much. On a normal shot it's not going to be a big deal and in a rush I just skip it.
Quick questions (really need to know these), 1) Can you combine an arm from one company (ex. Tiffen steadicam G-70X) with vest from another company (Arri Artemis)? 2) Are all the socket block on different vest universal with different arms? 3) Are all the Arms able to change post?
great question. yes for the most part you can. the socket blocks are standardized on most vests and arms. definitely the tiffen, pro, WK, flowcine. i think the arri vest was too but i don't really remember.. when it comes to the arms the posts are not standardized. each brand has there own diameter so you need to make sure it will work with the gimbal you are using. luckily there are converters so you can use any arm with any rig, you just need to find the correct post. they do changeout easily.
i don't think there is a 2 arm version. i think you are thinking of the ones they use for electronic gimbels that take some of the weight off of the operators arms.
@@SteadiRed Sorry for the misunderstanding but what I mean is the links. There are some vests with just one link while yours has 2 links. I get that the 2 links are better but in what way? BTW I'm talking about the budget arms that are meant for lighter loads.
Hello, Red. Awesome video and knowledge sharing for us (like all the time). I have 2 questions please. When you touch the sled or something else, then it seems to be very sensitive and if you look closer at the camera, we could see it get pendulum movements. So i know this setup is one of the best in the world, and i don't understand (if you haven't the electronic M1 Stab) how the horizon is always frozen ? dunno if i'm clear with this long question.... Last one (shorter) : how many springs have one arm only at the GX70 please ?
thanks for watching! im not really sure what you mean on the first one. i think when im messing around with it it wouldn't be very frozen haha. the g70 looks like one spring per segment but i believe there are 2 more springs inside of it. how that helps, i don't really know.😁
I loved this video!! Thank you so much!! When you work as steadicam operator, is it possible to work as freelance? Do you always have to bring your own equipment or it depends on the production?
Of course you work freelance. Film production work is inherently freelance. How it breaks down on set really depends. often in larger productions the Camera Op or B Camera Op is also going to act as a Steadicam Op. Just look at film credits. That said, for various reasons, some productions use a dedicated Steadicam Operator. If you gain a good enough reputation you become sought after like the top operators but that's the very top of the list. And oh-yeah, you are expected to have your own rig the majority of the time, so I hope you have great credit or 200,000.00 sitting around for the steadicam system, wireless follow focus, wireless video transmitters, batteries, cases, c stands, etc, if you want to do this at the professional level in film and TV.
Yes, I do work freelance. Although, technically they hire my company to provide a steadicam operator and I'm the only employee. I always bring my own gear but that is only the steadicam and the stuff I need to go with it. They provide the camera and everything else.
This will be very helpful to people who is interested in getting to know steadicam as there isn’t much videos like this on youtube. Good stuff. Thanks!
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching!
I can't foresee any situation where I'll ever use one of these things but it was enjoyable and impressive just to see the complexity of it demonstrated. Glad that I randomly thought I'd look up how this works for some reason!
hahaha, thanks for watching!
same here! 🙂
Same here too :)
Same. I'm still in search of a steadicam demo that shows arrows and such drawn explaining the forces, though.
I am pleasantly surprised to find a young operator who actually knows what he's talking about.
You know about static vs dynamic balance and you clearly demonstrate drop time. You make clearly visible adjustments.
Use of the docking bracket and your multi part video clearly illustrates proper technical methodology.
PS: Balance on the CP ENG rig took me anywhere from 30-45 minutes.
Thank you so much! i appreciate it!
Holy hell.....I never thought about just how much goes into properly weighing a fully rigged professional setup.
Thank you for doing this man. It gives so much scope to those interested in pursuing film as a fulltime job
Keep doing what you're doing!
thanks man! i wish you luck!
@@SteadiRed Thank you brother....consistency will yield the end results. All that's needed is motivation and passion (which you seem to have). Again thank you for going through the Eazy cam. I seldom get to see how it's setup (nevermind rigged).
I don’t have a steadi cam as yet. But I’m definitely applying this knowledge for when I do. I have a mini steadicam but the goal is to get to your level. You’re my teacher man! Thank a lot! Very informative video.
awesome man! keep at it and you can!
This is an outstanding tutorial! I especially enjoy the kitty wandering around in the background! Nice job!
Thank you! Cheers!
i know Im asking randomly but does anybody know a tool to get back into an instagram account..?
I somehow lost the password. I would love any tricks you can give me!
@Baker Rodney instablaster =)
@Kenzo Markus I really appreciate your reply. I found the site thru google and I'm waiting for the hacking stuff now.
Takes a while so I will get back to you later with my results.
@Kenzo Markus It did the trick and I actually got access to my account again. Im so happy!
Thank you so much, you really help me out !
Thank you for this. Getting my rig soon and your videos make everything so much clearer.
Red, I really enjoy your content. Very comprehensive and the pacing is perfect.
A really good benchmark for TH-cam tutorials. (also: love your sense of humor!)
Keep up the great work
Much appreciated!
Thank you for this. I just bought my first steadicam (though not the brand. A Came-TV Stabilizer) and there are a lack of videos for me to do research on this and get it right so I don't hurt anyone or myself. Great resource I hope it gets more views.
Thanks Mattias, it means a lot to me. Glad I could help!
this is clearly a grand theft auto created character
hahaha
Thank you for an approachable tutorial that is a good entry point for someone not yet ready to commit to the full expense of a rig or the workshops. One of the big questions coming from the outside is wether one can start on low-end rigs and learn from there, or if the workshops followed by purchasing at least $10,000 of gear is the only way, which the content found online from many seasoned operators would seem to suggest. I am definitely not "buy and M1 and take gold workshops" committed to learning yet, but with your guides, the book, and second hand mid-to-entry level stuff that can be found online, I am seriously considering giving steadicam a go!
Thanks so much! you can definitely start with something smaller and build your way up. the skills you learn on a small rig will transfer to a big rig so it is a smart plan especially if your not sue if you want to fully commit to it.
@@SteadiRed Six months later and I'm revisiting this video as I troubleshoot balancing my first rig…
even though i have a small camera unlike yours, i learned something from you. find the balance point. thank you
Awesome! I was hoping it would be useful for smaller rigs too.
If you want to practice with a smaller camera, you can also add a weight cage (aka practice cage) around your camera
Thanks for the tutorial. I don't believe I'll ever use one of these, or have a use to know this information, but I enjoy learning how tech works and really appreciate your knowledge in this gear. Thanks again!
Thanks for watching 😁
Solid video man! Thank you for sharing. My workshop got pushed cause of everything going on and so it's nice to get reacquainted with the basics from another Operator. Hoping you keep the series going!
Glad I could help! Sorry about your workshop, your going to enjoy it a lot!
well Said 👍
thanks red for your videos they are very good .. I think the big secret in this is the volt. I have a steadicam without the volt and the operation is much more erratic. Maybe you should clarify it because I happened to see your video and not understand why it did not achieve the same stability and it is a bit frustrating, until I saw that you had the volt ... anyway I recognize that your ability is magnificent. I saw all your videos and they are excellent. I loved the comments-reviews on the movies you make. Congratulations.
Thanks so much! The volt definitely helps a lot but it will still take a lot of practice 😁
Amazing explanation, it’s quite useful and informative. I support this channel!
Much appreciated!
That looks like a massive job!
Great video thanks for sharing..
Thanks for watching!
Wow! This is an amazing professionally made state-of-the-art camera tech! Keep it up!
Thank you! Will do!
I know you know who Garrett Brown is, but he never went into this kind of detail. I'll be watching this one a few times. Thanks for sharing SteadiRed.
thanks! glad you like it.
Great tutorial. Especially description of arm setting. Great job man👏👏👏
thanks so much!!!
Muy interesante,gracias por compartir tan valiosas instrucciones, un saludo desde Tenerife
I would have killed for this video a few years ago. Great stuff!
Thanks! Thats why I made it, I really wanted one when I first started too.
@@SteadiRed There's been some really good online tutorials the last few years, I am what I like to call internet-taught haha 👍🏻
Thanks for the help! I usually struggle with the steadicam 😊
Happy to help!
It has alot of usefully information for beginner like me. Your channel have a support from me!
I appreciate that
Thanks for video! Looking forward to more videos! Wish I had such gear for my short film.
Thanks for watching! I know, its awesome.
freaking speechless. what a rig.
it is beautiful 😁
wow what a huge gimbal. thank you for this informative video
Thanks man!
Great video! Nothing beats a real Steadicam. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks! 😀
Hey! thank you very much for your comment on my channel, here i am loving your work and also subbed you. thanks a ton for your appreciation.
Thank you! Cheers!
Nice job Red! So let me get this right..... #1 Always look cool and #2 Twist and Slide (cuz she likes it) . Hehe! Loved the comedy bud! Again, great job on the video!
Thanks man! hahaha
5:08 I’ll have to try that
hahaha
Amazing Red...... looking amazing buddy
thanks so much!
@@SteadiRed welcome
wow thanks for sharing .you have a massive stabilizer.keep it up my friend!
Thank you, I will
Red u are a life saver... keep it up dude
thanks man!!
NICE VIDEO BRO.. I LEARNED A LOT FOR THIS VIDEO THANK YOU FOR SHARING KEEP SAFE
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks for watching!
you have amazing setup bro
Appreciate it
I really like the setup you have, looks really nice
thanks man!
very interesting but I think it takes a lot of practice until you have such a steadicam under control. great stuff anyway!
it absolutely does
Super Helpful! Thanks for the tips! I am looking forward to more videos :)
Thanks! I'm glad it helped. I"m working on another one now
Great work Sir...
Thank you 😊
Keep the spirit for Ward and continue never retreat
Wow! This background looks amazing!
thanks man!!!
❤️love your videos Love from Nepal 🇳🇵
thanks!!
Thank you for that tutorial 🙌🏼🔥
you are much experienced bro keep it up gud work
thanks!
Just bought a small Steadicam for my Sony Camcorder at work and after watching this and your second video, I learned so much. Thanks for doing this. What stand do you use for assembling the rod?
awesome! glad i could help. i use the american grip steadicam stand but it is overkill for most things. if your rig is small enough you can get a lighting stand
great job
thanks man!
This was extremely helpful, thank you so much!
😁😁😁
Wow, ur gear is too professional for me🤣🤣nice content bro 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
hahaha, thanks!
Your rig is incredible! Subbed.
Awesome, thank you!
Great tutirial
thanks!
Very high-tech gear you got there 😳 Nice video bro! I might learn something from you. Keep it flowing 👊😎
Nice tips Bro.. Love your videos. 🙏🏽😊
Wow really great, nice ! thank you so much for sharing...!
Thank you! Cheers!
Your videos are really informative 🙌
Thanks so much!
Good job brother 👍
I love all your video
thanks so much!!!
This was soooo helpful thank you so much!
thanks man! you should check out my chanel, I get deeper into it😁
Great information here. I watched this even though I don't have a stabilizer. Haha. I guess you never stop learning ey!
hahaha, thanks for watching.
Nice Video.. Amazing 👏
thanks!!!
Great video! What a rig :)
Thanks! 👍
@@SteadiRed you're welcome
This looks really interesting :) thank you
thanks!!!
The twisting movement makes it slide easier! That's what she said lmfao! I was referring to a real steadicam balancing to build my own out of osmo4 with 3ft boom now I'm cutting wooden weight plates out of ply wood to attach to bottom of boom arm with 1/4 20 bolt.
Hahaha. Whattttt?! 😁
This verry helpful, thanks for sharing !!!
Glad it was helpful!
great video. thank you so much
Wooww my too,say Amazing and nice tutorial,we have steadycam M2 now,but very difficult to learn and practice this gimbal,what is different both M1 and M2,thx before Steady red
Awesome! I don't know all the differences but it is lighter and i know the carry weight is lower on the m2.
Its really nice one
Glad you like it
Thank you for this video
No worries! 😁
set up looks pricey bruh👌
it is, haha
thanks for the info 👌🏽 cool video
You're awesome, thanks for these videos!
Thanks!! Glad you like them!
Very nice bro
Wow..awesome..
Thank you! Cheers!
Cheers..☕
great tutorial!
thanks so much!
nice work
Thank you! Cheers!
Wow...this is very pro!
thanks!
GLIDECAM X-10 vs Thanos pro 2 which one is the best
Great info. An iPhone with Rode lav mic and sync to tenticale audio recorder. It will change your life. New sub.
Thanks! I was thinking about getting one. happy to have you 😁
Love this video! Dynamic balance has been an absolute pain to achieve for me however. I’m not sure what I’m doing wrong. I get close and then all of sudden am right back to where I started. Do you have any advice for Dynamic balance?
Thanks! You might be making too big of adjustments and keep going too far back and forth. But my best advice would be not to worry about it too much. On a normal shot it's not going to be a big deal and in a rush I just skip it.
what camera is that? its HUGE!
thanks a lot I learn more than I know :)
Happy to help!
hello friend i'm here sending back my full support.stay con.
thanks man!
WELCOME
Filmset 😱😱 i like it.
😁
Quick questions (really need to know these), 1) Can you combine an arm from one company (ex. Tiffen steadicam G-70X) with vest from another company (Arri Artemis)? 2) Are all the socket block on different vest universal with different arms? 3) Are all the Arms able to change post?
great question. yes for the most part you can. the socket blocks are standardized on most vests and arms. definitely the tiffen, pro, WK, flowcine. i think the arri vest was too but i don't really remember.. when it comes to the arms the posts are not standardized. each brand has there own diameter so you need to make sure it will work with the gimbal you are using. luckily there are converters so you can use any arm with any rig, you just need to find the correct post. they do changeout easily.
@@SteadiRed Thx so much Red! Really love your videos =)
for the arm to hold the camera do you have to leave the springs retracted or stretched?
im sorry, i don't understand the question.
Thanks for the guide but what's the difference between vests with one arm and two?
i don't think there is a 2 arm version. i think you are thinking of the ones they use for electronic gimbels that take some of the weight off of the operators arms.
@@SteadiRed Sorry for the misunderstanding but what I mean is the links. There are some vests with just one link while yours has 2 links. I get that the 2 links are better but in what way? BTW I'm talking about the budget arms that are meant for lighter loads.
I use a Flycam. where can I get such a tripod?
Nice
Thanks
Nice video
Thanks man!
So cool!
Thanks!!!
Thank you much for! Great video! ..I like your cat :-)
Thanks 😁
Hello, Red. Awesome video and knowledge sharing for us (like all the time). I have 2 questions please. When you touch the sled or something else, then it seems to be very sensitive and if you look closer at the camera, we could see it get pendulum movements. So i know this setup is one of the best in the world, and i don't understand (if you haven't the electronic M1 Stab) how the horizon is always frozen ? dunno if i'm clear with this long question.... Last one (shorter) : how many springs have one arm only at the GX70 please ?
thanks for watching! im not really sure what you mean on the first one. i think when im messing around with it it wouldn't be very frozen haha. the g70 looks like one spring per segment but i believe there are 2 more springs inside of it. how that helps, i don't really know.😁
Yooo bravow realy good videos
Appreciate it
Thank you sir
All the best
Wow..👍👍👍👍👍👍
Many many thanks
Thanks for the this great video! How much it's cost ?
it is really expensive, not for the average person. But there are more reasonable rigs for beginners out there that run on the same principles
Red, you obviously know your stuff, just curious, how long have you been a steadi-cam operator?
Thanks! I have been doing steadicam for over a year and camera work for over 8 years.
I loved this video!! Thank you so much!! When you work as steadicam operator, is it possible to work as freelance? Do you always have to bring your own equipment or it depends on the production?
Of course you work freelance. Film production work is inherently freelance. How it breaks down on set really depends. often in larger productions the Camera Op or B Camera Op is also going to act as a Steadicam Op. Just look at film credits. That said, for various reasons, some productions use a dedicated Steadicam Operator. If you gain a good enough reputation you become sought after like the top operators but that's the very top of the list. And oh-yeah, you are expected to have your own rig the majority of the time, so I hope you have great credit or 200,000.00 sitting around for the steadicam system, wireless follow focus, wireless video transmitters, batteries, cases, c stands, etc, if you want to do this at the professional level in film and TV.
Yes, I do work freelance. Although, technically they hire my company to provide a steadicam operator and I'm the only employee. I always bring my own gear but that is only the steadicam and the stuff I need to go with it. They provide the camera and everything else.
WOW PERFECT
thanks!!!
One question, is it possible to buy separately the Docking & Balance Bracket?
yes, but make sure the one you get is compatible with your rig.
@@SteadiRed Whats the name of your Docking & Balance Bracket?