ABC-Products HandyMan DV Instruction Manual - page 19
Bedienungsanleitung // Instruction Manual: HandyMan DV (06/06)
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01. Foreword
This manual with the content of the next pages is only intended to give you a
technical overview of the system with the most important parts and accessories. It is
by no means meant to teach you how to work with a balancing system, something
that is not possible to do in writing. There are a number of training courses for the
use of balancing systems on the market and we recommend that you take part in a
course to get accustomed with a balancing system. HandyMan is a user-friendly tool,
once you have the basic knowledge of how to use a balancing system you should not
have any difficulty filming with the system. Experience is the most important thing, the
more you use the system, the more you will get used to its reaction to movement.
The most important thing in fact is to train walking with your camera balanced on the
system, trying to achieve smoothest possible filming. Do some experiments: try
walking up stairs, down stairs, around obstacles like tables and chairs etc, follow a
person walking in front of you, train the movements you will be expected to perform.
Try quick and slow movements.
02. Introduction to HandyMan DV
Thank you for selecting HandyMan DV.
You have purchased a professional balancing system for cameras which will allow
you to integrate your filming with the creative „moving camera“ shots that make the
difference between static filming and lively realistic filming. We are sure you will
appreciate working with HandyMan DV, a system already used by many professional
cameramen like yourself all over the world.
With a special adapter you may be able to use the system on dollies, vehicles of
different kinds as well as helicopters. Ask your dealer about this.
A Handheld camera is always unstable as the cameraman´s movements are directly
passed on to the camera. HandyMan DV solves this problem with the following
technical and physical rules:
The camera´s mass and therefore the behaviour of the mass when moved is
neutralised by a shock dampening system.
The camera is isolated from the cameraman´s movements
The point of gravity is concentrated in the Handgrip of the balancing rod
The camera rests on one balance point
The spring arm absorbs all vertical shocks
Picture-control is performed by use of a monitor instead of a viewfinder