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Monopod vs tripod
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<blockquote data-quote="Horoscope Fish" data-source="post: 304537" data-attributes="member: 13090"><p>Sorry for the confusion... By "pod" I simply meant "monopod". A monopod collapses down and fits in the hip pocket of my jeans which makes a monopod really easy to carry around, unlike a tripod. Monopods are not AS stable a tripod; they're just not. But, even so, +90% of the time a monopod is stable ENOUGH for what I need to do. Their other main advantage is they don't have the huge "foot print" of a tripod; they give you a ton of extra stability and take up no floor space whatsoever. Places like museums and stadiums that don't allow tripods often have no issue at all with monopods for this very reason.</p><p></p><p>All that being said, when I need a tripod, I need a tripod. Night photography, HDR, long exposure photography... All of these aspects of photography require a decent tripod.</p><p></p><p><span style="color: #ffffff">...</span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Horoscope Fish, post: 304537, member: 13090"] Sorry for the confusion... By "pod" I simply meant "monopod". A monopod collapses down and fits in the hip pocket of my jeans which makes a monopod really easy to carry around, unlike a tripod. Monopods are not AS stable a tripod; they're just not. But, even so, +90% of the time a monopod is stable ENOUGH for what I need to do. Their other main advantage is they don't have the huge "foot print" of a tripod; they give you a ton of extra stability and take up no floor space whatsoever. Places like museums and stadiums that don't allow tripods often have no issue at all with monopods for this very reason. All that being said, when I need a tripod, I need a tripod. Night photography, HDR, long exposure photography... All of these aspects of photography require a decent tripod. [COLOR=#ffffff]...[/COLOR] [/QUOTE]
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