Steve Maskery
Established Member
Oh, don't you just hate Predictive Text? That should have read Filming Dolly: Part One. Sorry about that.
My filming is pretty much entirely static, as I'm the only one around to be chief, cook and bottlewasher. So the camera is on a tripod and I stand there and spout off.
But I have a need for a tracking shot, about 2m long. I've seen the little home-made ones using plastic pipe and skateboard wheels, but I need it yesterday and I do have some nice big rubber wheels salvaged off a wrecked shopping trolley that was dumped in my front garden. So off I went.
The first task was to measure the angle of the tripod leg when fully open.
The feet are going to be held in a sort of saw-tooth rack, with the teeth set at the angle of the tripod. This requires a bevel cut, but my saw tilts to the right, so I prefer to have the fence on the left, so that the blade tilts away from it. That way nothing can get trapped.
However, if I move my fence to the left, it can no longer support my SUVA guard, so I brought my Workshop Essentials Tablesaw Fence into play. I don't need to use it very often, because my normal fence is superb, but at times like this it comes into its own. I made it for the last of my DVDs in my old workshop, but it is so good that if I made it again, I would change nothing except the size of the main fence section. This is 50mm wide and 25mm high - I would recommend 50w x 75H now.
So this is the setup. WE fence on the left, then the tilted blade, then a big gap, then the fence supporting the guard.
And from the side:
As soon as I had ripped the piece I could see that it was not thick enough, so I found a bigger piece and did it again.
Then it was a case of cutting it up into 120mm lengths and gluing them to a piece of 6mm MDF.
My filming is pretty much entirely static, as I'm the only one around to be chief, cook and bottlewasher. So the camera is on a tripod and I stand there and spout off.
But I have a need for a tracking shot, about 2m long. I've seen the little home-made ones using plastic pipe and skateboard wheels, but I need it yesterday and I do have some nice big rubber wheels salvaged off a wrecked shopping trolley that was dumped in my front garden. So off I went.
The first task was to measure the angle of the tripod leg when fully open.
The feet are going to be held in a sort of saw-tooth rack, with the teeth set at the angle of the tripod. This requires a bevel cut, but my saw tilts to the right, so I prefer to have the fence on the left, so that the blade tilts away from it. That way nothing can get trapped.
However, if I move my fence to the left, it can no longer support my SUVA guard, so I brought my Workshop Essentials Tablesaw Fence into play. I don't need to use it very often, because my normal fence is superb, but at times like this it comes into its own. I made it for the last of my DVDs in my old workshop, but it is so good that if I made it again, I would change nothing except the size of the main fence section. This is 50mm wide and 25mm high - I would recommend 50w x 75H now.
So this is the setup. WE fence on the left, then the tilted blade, then a big gap, then the fence supporting the guard.
And from the side:
As soon as I had ripped the piece I could see that it was not thick enough, so I found a bigger piece and did it again.
Then it was a case of cutting it up into 120mm lengths and gluing them to a piece of 6mm MDF.