You said you decided to get some really small brackets and then said they were not so small. I expected to have you suggest smaller ones, but you went with what you purchased.
Thanks for shooting this video. I'm seeing it three years after you shot it but the brackets are still available and perfect for my studio where floor space is at a premium.
Thanks Bill. Still have and use them, and love the floor space. Highly suggest you make darn sure where you want the light on stands first. Once nailed, lose the stands, gain some floor space, and be happy. :)
Great video! I'm just starting to set up a space for a film studio, where I can just go in and start filming without setting up and breaking down all my gear every single time... I just got some brackets so I could hang my backdrops directly off the wall, and I was thinking about doing the same thing with the lights and overhead mic. It was really cool seeing you go through the whole process in time-lapse.
I’m really glad I found this video! I’ve been looking at these arms for a while now but thought they were too large for my space. It never occurred to me to mount them with the bases going horizontally instead of vertical. Your space looks very similar to mine, right down to the sloped ceiling and the alcove! So I think these are going to work out after all. Thank you for the great video!
You bet! I like these a lot, and LOVE no light stands all over the place, and ability to adjust these. I still have an extra one I am thinking of using to mount the overhead mic or camera on from the ceiling.
I hear ya! My 'studio' is also my bedroom and my recording studio so floor space is at a premium! I'm not really all that handy so I have a couple questions regarding mounting these that I hope you'll be willing to answer. First, other than your installation every other photo I see of these shows them mounted with the base vertically as opposed to how yours are (horizontally). Do you feel the mounting loses any strength in this direction? When you installed it looks like you're using a stud finder (that part of the video moves pretty fast LOL). Were you able to screw into studs for all four mounting holes? If not, what kind of screws did you use? Did you use wall anchors/zip toggles? Thank you in advance and, once again, for this video. I received the brackets this evening and look forward to having them up and getting to some video work!
1. It loses SOME strength, but I have VERY heavy Aputure Tri-8's mounted to them, so it should be OK. 2. It comes with these silly anchors for concrete. Stupid. I used 2 of the holes into stud, and the other two with drywall anchors, and they are super. 3.) You probably have them up by now, so how are they working for you?
For some reason I simply cannot tighten the bolts enough, so if I have the arm extended and swing it out, the weight from the light (a 20"x20" softbox) pulls the base fixture down. Tried sockets, wrenches, to no avail. I currently have two of these mounts - for one of them I have no need to swing the arm out (I bounce that light off of the wall to which it's attached for a soft fill). For the one I was having the issue with I simply re-mounted it so the base is now vertical. It also gives me the option of different heights, so if I want to film myself standing, having it mounted this way gives me more flexibility. Although I've had my channel for several years I'm only now starting to get serious with it. Been studying the basics now for a couple months, bought some lights, camera, etc. I'm leaving later this week for a 10 day gig out of the country (Aruba - 2 gigs, the rest downtime - once in a while being a musician pays off LOL). When I return I plan to begin in ernest with some new content. Looking forward to putting all I'm learning into practice! Thanks for your videos and for your help!
I cannot stand my lights! Tripods take wayyyyy too much space and I always trip over them! I've been thinking about installing a studio ceiling track system and as you already know, they're not cheap!! I think these wall brackets are exactly what I need! Thank you so much for doing this review! I don't know what I would do without you! ;)
Hey Zaza! Cool. Yeah, I really hate the stand thing, so this fit the bill for me, and I like that they are moveable and retractable. I can always unmount the lights and take them with the stands, but I'm not planning on moving my in home studio any time soon.
Hi, I watched your video and I really liked the info you shared about the Wall Mount for ring lights, thank you so much for sharing it!!! I have a question, you put a note on the video that said that the expansion screws are for mounting to concrete only . What type or size of drywall screws did you use to hang your wall mounting arm?
@@BasicFilmmaker Awesome, glad to know they are quality. I like that they can fold down so much, I want to hang one from the ceiling to make a drop camera, then be able to get it out of the way for a live stream. Thank you again! Great content!
Great overview, and it was nice to see you installing them in your studio. For a fixed studio location, these look invaluable. I wish I had bought them back when you posted this review, they're nearly double the price now, but I'm still thinking I'll get a few of these.
Its great to see a solution to the annoying space taking light stands....is there a video clip that shows how versatile the studio has become that also shows how flexible the lights are now and all the different angles that it can move into...up/down...sideways and forward etc... As I ma thinking of buying two to fit my Bowens 400's. Thank you for sharing your thoughts. Appreciate it.
You bet. I haven't really done a video like that, however, they move horizontally almost 180 degrees (from wall left to wall right) and up and down about 150 degrees (guessing) so they've got quite bit of throw. Also, they are surprisingly large and it's a good idea to SECURELY fix them to the wall - small drywall mounts are not a great idea.
Thank you so much for your prompt reply....for me its about the photography side of things at the moment with just a small bedroom studio set up as my son has moved out and I just love to take family and individual portraits. But who knows after watching your clip I may make videos of my family as fun. Once thank you for your help & support. Have a great day.....and like Laiqul says it was funny to see you lay flat on the table at end....its nice to giggle...life is to short.
Anthony Perez You can use these with any light, camera, etc. They are big and heavy, which makes them great, but my be a bit overkill for a small ring light.
It holds quite a bit. If you’re going to mount something very heavy on it you need to make sure is mounted to something secure like the studs and not just use the drywall anchors. I had an aperture try eight, fairy have a light, monitor these and it held with no problem.
I noticed you installed one of them horizontally...I'm curious if over time this causes the lights on that stand to slowly drop or is the friction in the swivel joint simply tight enough?
I've had no problem with that. These things have held up over 4 years now and I've mounted some pretty heavy lights (Tri-8s) to these. As long as they are securely mounted to the wall it's all good.
@@BasicFilmmaker i have The same question about the one installed horizontally, if it gets down or the nut are enough to hold the lights in that position ? I al ready bought one and im thinking to install them same as you do, thanks !
Absolutely excellent video and perfect timing as I am in the finishing stages of setting up my dedicated studio at my office. Look sturdy enough to be car proof :)
Kevin - The Basic Filmmaker thx Kev. Yes I’ve been using green screen continuously for several months now, in my garage. The lighting setup works perfectly except that it’s a pain when I want to put the wife’s car away each night, which means packing up the stands etc. My idea is to wall mount these stands so I can swing the video lights away more quickly etc. Thx again mate.
Hi Kevin, thanks for your video. How did you connect the light to the 1/4" male? I have a Neewer LED panel that I want to attach to something other than the standard stand. Many thanks
1/4” mounting? You’ll need to get adapters that screw over the pins you have, or new baby pins that.are 1/4”. They are very cheap. Here’s some Neewer baby pins that should work for you: amzn.to/2QwYJEA
@@BasicFilmmaker thanks for the quick response, Kevin. Much appreciated. I realise this might not be possible but I’m trying to find a way of attaching this light/box to a 1/4” male ruclips.net/video/_1zwKcUy6Ck/видео.html
Really helpful, thanks! Question: I don’t have room for a desk in my sad little closet recording space so I’d like to use a boom arm to gain more floor space (no pun intended)! 😆 It seems most adjustable mic boom arms clamp to a desk. Are these wall mounting boom arms as adjustable as the other kind (swiveling, rotating on a ball etc)? Or would it work WITH one of those other desk mount kinds? I’m guessing not re. the latter. It’s an old house with pretty tall ceilings though I could probably mount it high up on the wall if need be. Thanks!
There are smaller wall mountable boom rugs that podcasters use with wall mounts that are perfect. I’m traveling back from NAB Show right now but will get you a link when I get back in a couple days.
I've been recently considering purchasing one of these products to support a softbox over a needed position in my studio setup. I was wondering, does this product support only a certain type of product to connect with or is this universal with most? Thank you.
Great video! Only one question: what is the minimun size of this? I'm in vacation in USA and i'm planning to bring one of this to home.... It fits into a regular luggage?
They weigh in at almost 6 pounds each. I am GUESSING to say they're about 3 foot long when folded up? I can't measure them for you as they are mounted on my walls and in use.
I saw that you mounted one of the light brackets sideways, (4:42+ in the video). Looking at the Amazon photos of the bracket, I see that there are two bolts that look hard to reach with tools to reposition that light vertically. Did you have to get them really snug to keep the light in the position you wanted?
It worked just fine for me. The bolts on the bracket that move the arm up and down in that mounting position I did tighten up snugly, and it works great!
@@BasicFilmmaker god I hope not, they're little circular cone lights (the bulb is surrounded by a chrome cone shaped desk-lamp style shroud) they look basic and god-willing, under $50 😂 Look like they'd work great for hair lights or key lights.
Did you mount these to studs, or just to the drywall? I was thinking of getting these but hadn't figured out whether I needed to mount them to studs to be sturdy.
My lights and the stands are heavy. There are four mounting holes, so I made sure two of them went into a stud, and the other two I just used drywall anchors. Been working fine. The come with anchors to mount into concrete (???) I was confused, but made it work.
Kit.com, what an interesting web site. Do the links from these items use your affiliate links? I saw this in their _Terms of Service_ but don't know if it means they get the affiliate income from Amazon our you do. _Kit is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to __amazon.com__._
I should come with a baby pin on the end, and I think it’s reversible with a 3/8 and 1/4 inch on each end of the pin. If not, a simple adapter will work. If the shock mount is 5/8 inch then you’ll need to get an adapter for that.
Martin! Yes, still use them. Gone from light LEDs and not they hold the very heavy Tri-8s. They are pretty fixed and I don't really move them in or out, but I can. :)
I tried these, but my neewer softbox lights won't get tight on this pin. they just end up pointing at the ground. I have been contacting neewer but they have been no help.
Basic Filmmaker. THANKS A MILLION !!! I'll share my video after it is done !!! I like that set up because it gives sense of being on stage !!! I learned a lot from you The Great Basic Filmmaker !!!! My Channel !!!!!
Está funcionando muito bem a tradução e obrigado com o carinho em responder em portugues. Eu também compro produtos pra fazer review em meu canal. Abraço
Hey, would I be able to connect these softboxes: www.amazon.co.uk/Abeststudio-Continuous-Lighting-Photography-Softboxes/dp/B01F59NSX6/ or similar to the wall mount? Cheers!
I'm thinking about buying this: www.amazon.com/gp/product/B018JXD68C/ref=ox_sc_act_title_1?smid=A2L21YHN8Q3B6W&psc=1 < for my "Neewer 200Ws" lights. with 40 inch softbox. Do you think it will be able to hold that up together. And do I need anything else to attach them together? Would appreciate it if you could answer this for me! Thanks
I do have those mounts and have mounted some lights to them. We just need to make sure with really heavy things that they are drilled into a stud otherwise if you want something really heavy on these and are only using those little plastic anchors into your drywall, they’re going to fall out or rip out.
Yes, you are correct. The public email notification just came in 25 minutes ago, but I got the email from your playlist around 3:30 in the morning. I happen to be up. I was little confused why it didn't seem public after watching your video and commenting. Now it makes sense why I got first. Have a great day :)
*Want to see the final result? Check out my Studio Tour here: **ruclips.net/video/u6sRUbpckTQ/видео.html*
Responding to own comment to get it out of the "comments not responded to" queue. Notified RUclips, not fixed yet. :)
You said you decided to get some really small brackets and then said they were not so small. I expected to have you suggest smaller ones, but you went with what you purchased.
Thanks for shooting this video. I'm seeing it three years after you shot it but the brackets are still available and perfect for my studio where floor space is at a premium.
Thanks Bill. Still have and use them, and love the floor space. Highly suggest you make darn sure where you want the light on stands first. Once nailed, lose the stands, gain some floor space, and be happy. :)
Great video! I'm just starting to set up a space for a film studio, where I can just go in and start filming without setting up and breaking down all my gear every single time... I just got some brackets so I could hang my backdrops directly off the wall, and I was thinking about doing the same thing with the lights and overhead mic. It was really cool seeing you go through the whole process in time-lapse.
Thanks Film Runner. These brackets are surprisingly BIG.
I’m really glad I found this video! I’ve been looking at these arms for a while now but thought they were too large for my space. It never occurred to me to mount them with the bases going horizontally instead of vertical. Your space looks very similar to mine, right down to the sloped ceiling and the alcove! So I think these are going to work out after all. Thank you for the great video!
You bet! I like these a lot, and LOVE no light stands all over the place, and ability to adjust these. I still have an extra one I am thinking of using to mount the overhead mic or camera on from the ceiling.
I hear ya! My 'studio' is also my bedroom and my recording studio so floor space is at a premium!
I'm not really all that handy so I have a couple questions regarding mounting these that I hope you'll be willing to answer. First, other than your installation every other photo I see of these shows them mounted with the base vertically as opposed to how yours are (horizontally). Do you feel the mounting loses any strength in this direction?
When you installed it looks like you're using a stud finder (that part of the video moves pretty fast LOL). Were you able to screw into studs for all four mounting holes? If not, what kind of screws did you use? Did you use wall anchors/zip toggles?
Thank you in advance and, once again, for this video. I received the brackets this evening and look forward to having them up and getting to some video work!
1. It loses SOME strength, but I have VERY heavy Aputure Tri-8's mounted to them, so it should be OK. 2. It comes with these silly anchors for concrete. Stupid. I used 2 of the holes into stud, and the other two with drywall anchors, and they are super. 3.) You probably have them up by now, so how are they working for you?
For some reason I simply cannot tighten the bolts enough, so if I have the arm extended and swing it out, the weight from the light (a 20"x20" softbox) pulls the base fixture down. Tried sockets, wrenches, to no avail. I currently have two of these mounts - for one of them I have no need to swing the arm out (I bounce that light off of the wall to which it's attached for a soft fill). For the one I was having the issue with I simply re-mounted it so the base is now vertical. It also gives me the option of different heights, so if I want to film myself standing, having it mounted this way gives me more flexibility. Although I've had my channel for several years I'm only now starting to get serious with it. Been studying the basics now for a couple months, bought some lights, camera, etc. I'm leaving later this week for a 10 day gig out of the country (Aruba - 2 gigs, the rest downtime - once in a while being a musician pays off LOL). When I return I plan to begin in ernest with some new content. Looking forward to putting all I'm learning into practice!
Thanks for your videos and for your help!
By the way - I too have two of the screws into stud. The other two I used zip toggle anchors - a breeze to install and, apparently, very strong.
I cannot stand my lights! Tripods take wayyyyy too much space and I always trip over them! I've been thinking about installing a studio ceiling track system and as you already know, they're not cheap!! I think these wall brackets are exactly what I need! Thank you so much for doing this review! I don't know what I would do without you! ;)
Hey Zaza! Cool. Yeah, I really hate the stand thing, so this fit the bill for me, and I like that they are moveable and retractable. I can always unmount the lights and take them with the stands, but I'm not planning on moving my in home studio any time soon.
LOVE ❤️ These so much I bought one ☝🏻 & maybe now I have your affiliate link I will buy more 👍🏻 Love you man ✌🏻
❤️
You are such a joy
Thanks Ramesh!
Hardest working man on YT!! Thanks.
Well, hard work, yeah, hardest? Not sure about that, but thanks!
Hi, I watched your video and I really liked the info you shared about the Wall Mount for ring lights, thank you so much for sharing it!!! I have a question, you put a note on the video that said that the expansion screws are for mounting to concrete only . What type or size of drywall screws did you use to hang your wall mounting arm?
1/4 " into stud.
Thanks for showing this video, it confirmed this is def what I'm needing for my home studio.
Glad I could help! Still have mine, love them.
@@BasicFilmmaker Awesome, glad to know they are quality. I like that they can fold down so much, I want to hang one from the ceiling to make a drop camera, then be able to get it out of the way for a live stream.
Thank you again! Great content!
Those seem like pretty useful additions for saving space! Thanks for sharing!
Thanks Eric. I thought they would suck, but I really like them!
Would be nice to see a walk through of finished project. Like, which lights are where and brands and such. Great idea though!
Hey Camryn! You can see those including everything here on my Studio Tour: ruclips.net/video/u6sRUbpckTQ/видео.html
Great overview, and it was nice to see you installing them in your studio. For a fixed studio location, these look invaluable. I wish I had bought them back when you posted this review, they're nearly double the price now, but I'm still thinking I'll get a few of these.
Double the price? Eyahh! They are great but I wonder why the price increase.
Dude so glad you're uploading again. Love your reviews and tips, they've been foundational to my work as a videographer
Thanks Micah! Appreciate the kind comment!
Its great to see a solution to the annoying space taking light stands....is there a video clip that shows how versatile the studio has become that also shows how flexible the lights are now and all the different angles that it can move into...up/down...sideways and forward etc... As I ma thinking of buying two to fit my Bowens 400's. Thank you for sharing your thoughts. Appreciate it.
You bet. I haven't really done a video like that, however, they move horizontally almost 180 degrees (from wall left to wall right) and up and down about 150 degrees (guessing) so they've got quite bit of throw. Also, they are surprisingly large and it's a good idea to SECURELY fix them to the wall - small drywall mounts are not a great idea.
Thank you so much for your prompt reply....for me its about the photography side of things at the moment with just a small bedroom studio set up as my son has moved out and I just love to take family and individual portraits. But who knows after watching your clip I may make videos of my family as fun. Once thank you for your help & support. Have a great day.....and like Laiqul says it was funny to see you lay flat on the table at end....its nice to giggle...life is to short.
Pradip Kotecha :)
Love the video, but can I use this with a ring light ¿
Anthony Perez You can use these with any light, camera, etc. They are big and heavy, which makes them great, but my be a bit overkill for a small ring light.
love the video. love this idea it"s about time someone makes these , helps keep the studio clean and less light stands to trip over
Thanks! I've got 6 of these now and love the no light stand setup and clean floor space.
@@BasicFilmmaker on the other hand though it's just not a photoshoot if you don't break your neck and curse like a sailor afterwards lol
LOL! A joke, but there's is some truth there. :)
And the most important question, how many kg does this support?
It holds quite a bit. If you’re going to mount something very heavy on it you need to make sure is mounted to something secure like the studs and not just use the drywall anchors. I had an aperture try eight, fairy have a light, monitor these and it held with no problem.
Do you have an updated video of an overview of the studio now without the floor stands?
Here's my Studio Walkthrough as of November 2019: ruclips.net/video/u6sRUbpckTQ/видео.html
is there a follow up video to this?
Not really, unless you look at my studio tour video. What is it you need to know?
Do you have a video on how to install them?
Nope. Very easy. Drill into stud, bolt to wall.
@@BasicFilmmaker thxs but I used some dry wall anchors earlier
Cool. I needed a stud as I am hanging super heavy lights on these.
I noticed you installed one of them horizontally...I'm curious if over time this causes the lights on that stand to slowly drop or is the friction in the swivel joint simply tight enough?
I've had no problem with that. These things have held up over 4 years now and I've mounted some pretty heavy lights (Tri-8s) to these. As long as they are securely mounted to the wall it's all good.
@@BasicFilmmaker i have The same question about the one installed horizontally, if it gets down or the nut are enough to hold the lights in that position ? I al ready bought one and im thinking to install them same as you do, thanks !
Absolutely excellent video and perfect timing as I am in the finishing stages of setting up my dedicated studio at my office. Look sturdy enough to be car proof :)
LOL! If you are still making car comments in 2018, I am going to have to send you a certificate of awesome or something. :)
lol, Challenge accepted ! :)
YAY!!
This is very helpful. Thank you!
You're very welcome!
So dope 💯 thank you, I just bought two for my shop they are amazing
Great. I still use them after all these years.
Good find Jack!
Thanks!!
This is a funny video. Like the sneaky use of the stud finder. Well done mate. I’m about to purchase a couple of these things. Regards from Oz.
Awesome. Make SURE you have your lights now where you want them first. You can spend days or weeks until you get them correct. THEN perma moun them.
Kevin - The Basic Filmmaker thx Kev. Yes I’ve been using green screen continuously for several months now, in my garage. The lighting setup works perfectly except that it’s a pain when I want to put the wife’s car away each night, which means packing up the stands etc. My idea is to wall mount these stands so I can swing the video lights away more quickly etc. Thx again mate.
You bet. I LOVE not having lights stands or nearly anything on my floor.
Jesus Christ!!! Men you're such a big help I'm so getting this and using you link thank so much.
Thank Josue. I still have them and love the floor space. 👍
Hi Kevin, thanks for your video. How did you connect the light to the 1/4" male? I have a Neewer LED panel that I want to attach to something other than the standard stand. Many thanks
1/4” mounting? You’ll need to get adapters that screw over the pins you have, or new baby pins that.are 1/4”. They are very cheap. Here’s some Neewer baby pins that should work for you: amzn.to/2QwYJEA
@@BasicFilmmaker thanks for the quick response, Kevin. Much appreciated. I realise this might not be possible but I’m trying to find a way of attaching this light/box to a 1/4” male ruclips.net/video/_1zwKcUy6Ck/видео.html
Looks like a great idea and solution. Thanks.
Very happy with these.
How long are the wall screws? What size and length of the drill bit to use?
As stated, it comes with concrtre wall mounts, or did. The size of bolts you need and length are dependent on your installation.
Really helpful, thanks! Question: I don’t have room for a desk in my sad little closet recording space so I’d like to use a boom arm to gain more floor space (no pun intended)! 😆 It seems most adjustable mic boom arms clamp to a desk. Are these wall mounting boom arms as adjustable as the other kind (swiveling, rotating on a ball etc)? Or would it work WITH one of those other desk mount kinds? I’m guessing not re. the latter. It’s an old house with pretty tall ceilings though I could probably mount it high up on the wall if need be. Thanks!
There are smaller wall mountable boom rugs that podcasters use with wall mounts that are perfect. I’m traveling back from NAB Show right now but will get you a link when I get back in a couple days.
Can you use these brackets with a ring light?
+Brandy Page I would imagine so. They use the standard pin type light mounting. They a BIG so might be a bit overkill.
I've been recently considering purchasing one of these products to support a softbox over a needed position in my studio setup. I was wondering, does this product support only a certain type of product to connect with or is this universal with most? Thank you.
It’s got those regular light stand pins. So the pin comes out, can be placed on top or sides, and there’s a 1/4 and 3/8 on each side of the pin.
Great video! Only one question: what is the minimun size of this? I'm in vacation in USA and i'm planning to bring one of this to home.... It fits into a regular luggage?
They weigh in at almost 6 pounds each. I am GUESSING to say they're about 3 foot long when folded up? I can't measure them for you as they are mounted on my walls and in use.
I saw that you mounted one of the light brackets sideways, (4:42+ in the video). Looking at the Amazon photos of the bracket, I see that there are two bolts that look hard to reach with tools to reposition that light vertically. Did you have to get them really snug to keep the light in the position you wanted?
It worked just fine for me. The bolts on the bracket that move the arm up and down in that mounting position I did tighten up snugly, and it works great!
What are those silver/chrome spotlights you have? They're not on your gear page
Are you talking about these? amzn.to/2KZwd9k
@@BasicFilmmaker god I hope not, they're little circular cone lights (the bulb is surrounded by a chrome cone shaped desk-lamp style shroud) they look basic and god-willing, under $50 😂 Look like they'd work great for hair lights or key lights.
LOL! You're talking about these things: amzn.to/2PlDXXt
@@BasicFilmmaker thank you, just bought them using your link!
Great. Good idea to get some bulbs, like 5000 or 5500K so things are consistent.
Did you mount these to studs, or just to the drywall? I was thinking of getting these but hadn't figured out whether I needed to mount them to studs to be sturdy.
My lights and the stands are heavy. There are four mounting holes, so I made sure two of them went into a stud, and the other two I just used drywall anchors. Been working fine. The come with anchors to mount into concrete (???) I was confused, but made it work.
Thank you so much. Did you use anchor when you install this on the wall?
The supplied mounting didn't work for me, so I used some stiff metal wall anchors.
Great video!
Thanks Zampi!
epic video, well done. oh and don't forget to stay hydrated LOL
Thank you. Drinking water now. 👍
I love having the lights mounted like that. I also like the look of that cart with all the drawers in it. Do you have a name or link to that? Thanks.
Never mind about finding a link to the cart. There's a million of them on Amazon.
Hey Robert! You can find links to just about everything I have at kit.com/BasicFilmmaker.
Kit.com, what an interesting web site. Do the links from these items use your affiliate links?
I saw this in their _Terms of Service_ but don't know if it means they get the affiliate income from Amazon our you do.
_Kit is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to __amazon.com__._
Yes, they use my affiliate links. I don't know if that's for me and a select few, or everyone. The links true out when clicked on.
Hi any idea which fitting we need to put a Microphone on there ?
It’s a condenser with a shock mount
I should come with a baby pin on the end, and I think it’s reversible with a 3/8 and 1/4 inch on each end of the pin. If not, a simple adapter will work. If the shock mount is 5/8 inch then you’ll need to get an adapter for that.
@@BasicFilmmaker thanks Kevin 😊
Hi Jack - How have these lamp brackets worked out in practice after six moths?
Martin! Yes, still use them. Gone from light LEDs and not they hold the very heavy Tri-8s. They are pretty fixed and I don't really move them in or out, but I can. :)
Excellent insight. Thanks.
Very welcome!!
Are there ceiling mounts?
There's not dedicated ceiling mounts, but it was easy enough to mount mine into the studs,
@@BasicFilmmaker Ok, so you think it's worth having as ceiling stands? I'm using GH5 with small lenses
@@bluefilmsltd For me, I try and wall or ceiling mount whatever I can. Less cluter makes everything easier.
I tried these, but my neewer softbox lights won't get tight on this pin. they just end up pointing at the ground. I have been contacting neewer but they have been no help.
Keep trying to reply to this and the comment get deleted.
Its funny when you laying on the tablet 😂
I was exhausted. :)
the ending killed me lol
👍
I hope you like them!
They are great!
Does anyone make a smaller version of the Wall Mounting Boom Arm with Triangle Base or something comparable, but small?
Hi
Again
Do you have the info or link for the color led light ?
Many Thanks !!!
The ones hitting the background screen (blue)?
Basic Filmmaker
Yes
The blue ones.
Ha! They are simple Lowes/Home Depot can lights, and the LED lights are from the same.
Basic Filmmaker. THANKS A MILLION !!!
I'll share my video after it is done !!!
I like that set up because it gives sense of being on stage !!!
I learned a lot from you
The Great Basic Filmmaker !!!!
My Channel !!!!!
Thanks Jimenez!
how many price this wall mount
Links are in the video description.
😁👍well done
Thanks Vic!
Great Video Awesome !!!!
Thank you Jimenez!
Ótimo Review ! essa vara deixa o chão livre. Vou importar duas dessa para mim colocar em meu estudio também. Forte abraço amigo. Alan Inkmania
Obrigado Alan. Espero que estas traduções de inglês para português estejam funcionando. :)
Hahaha It worked fine! I live in America but as a Brazilian I can assure you it was perfect Portuguese.
Está funcionando muito bem a tradução e obrigado com o carinho em responder em portugues. Eu também compro produtos pra fazer review em meu canal. Abraço
Hahaha , verdade Pedro. Abraço pra você também. Alan
Great. I don't want to accidentally offend your family or something with words I don't know. :)
Gee, I wish I was as fast as you.
You need the magical camera. It makes everything faster. :)
Hey, would I be able to connect these softboxes: www.amazon.co.uk/Abeststudio-Continuous-Lighting-Photography-Softboxes/dp/B01F59NSX6/ or similar to the wall mount? Cheers!
Should be fine, as since they (or any light) has a standard light stand mount, that thing at the end with holes and a silver nib.
The brandname is spelled "Neewer."
Oh my. Thanks. I updated the thumbnail, no idea how long it takes to show up.
I'm thinking about buying this: www.amazon.com/gp/product/B018JXD68C/ref=ox_sc_act_title_1?smid=A2L21YHN8Q3B6W&psc=1 < for my "Neewer 200Ws" lights. with 40 inch softbox. Do you think it will be able to hold that up together. And do I need anything else to attach them together? Would appreciate it if you could answer this for me! Thanks
I do have those mounts and have mounted some lights to them. We just need to make sure with really heavy things that they are drilled into a stud otherwise if you want something really heavy on these and are only using those little plastic anchors into your drywall, they’re going to fall out or rip out.
first.
Indeed!
LOL, Just wanted to do it once
Haha! You must be subscribed to a playlist or my blog. It wasn't released yet public so you indeed were the first!
Yes, you are correct. The public email notification just came in 25 minutes ago, but I got the email from your playlist around 3:30 in the morning. I happen to be up. I was little confused why it didn't seem public after watching your video and commenting. Now it makes sense why I got first. Have a great day :)
Thanks Steen!