Quote:
Originally Posted by Treebeard
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Don't get conned on one of those arms, they are just loc-line tubing you can get from J&L for a fraction of the price. With some playing around with connecters and adapters you can save a pretty penny.
You need a red filter because the red spectrum of light is the first to disappear when light goes through water (anywhere). However, if you have a video light, a red filter is redundant because you are providing a full spectrum light source.
Great video and pictures daplatapus
![#mrgreen](images/smilies/icon_mrgreen.gif)
Water looks really clear on the island! Over here we are just getting over some 1' viz, keeping track of students is a nightmare when you can barely see your own hands
![#sad](images/smilies/icon_sad.gif)
Getting a tray definitely helps with stabilizing footage. I really like my Archon D11v video lights, they are cheap too, only $40~50 a pop.
I'll show off my video of a stubby squid eating a shrimp I caught recently during a night dive
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Iez...ature=youtu.be
edit: That sony cam looks sweet! I think it'd be great to rig onto the side of your head for a constant running head cam without having a block sitting on top of your head. I wonder if the stabilization software works for divers with unsteady hands?