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Ultrapod

ultrapod.jpg

For years I used a PedCo Ultrapod II, which I bought at REI in San Francisco. At the time it was an REI-branded version; it survived years of being mounted on a motorcycle and many trips abroad until I gave it away to a good friend who fell in love with it. I recently went to replace my Ultrapod and looked at the previously reviewed Gorillapod extensively. Compared to my old Ultrapod, though, the Gorillapod seems fiddly, heavy and expensive. I re-ordered the Ultrapod II from Amazon (it was about $15), and am once again really pleased with it.

The Gorillapod is probably a bit better for mounting on the top of a pole (as pictured in the ads). But for mounting on the sides of poles, trees, chairs, as well as setting upright on rocks, tables, suitcases; for quick and accurate adjustments, and for supporting both light and heavy cameras securely (strapped to a motorcycle handlebar at high speed driving through the Bay Bridge tunnel between Oakland and San Fancisco--see photo), I like the Ultrapod best.

ultrapod2.jpg

There's a difference between the Ultrapod and the Ultrapod II, I think the former is lighter and smaller, but less robust. I've only ever owned the latter. I used my first Ultrapod II with a Canon Powershot digital camera, a medium-sized model that would be large by today's standards. That's the camera I mounted on my motorcycle handlebars.

ultrapod3sm.jpg

The Ultrapod II has legs with triangular cross-sections for rigidity. In the collapsed positions, the tripod's legs nicely cup a pole or handlebar. Using the (very securely built-in) Velcro strap, I was able to firmly attach the tripod to my handlebar grips. Because the tripod was mounted directly to the handlebar grip, my hand curled around both for added security while driving.

Now I use the Ultrapod II mostly with a Flip Mino HD, which is extremely small and light. I occasionally use it with a Nikon D40 digital SLR, which is bulky but still reasonably light. The Ultrapod II does an excellent job of holding both cameras in all kinds of settings (tree branches, rocks, chair legs, suitcases), and it's also excellent as a table-top tripod. And it's particularly on tabletop and other flat settings where I think the Ultrapod is really much more stable than the Gorillapod. When I was doing a lot of toy photography and animation, that stability on flat surfaces helped tremendously.

-- Ashish Ranpura  

Pedco Ultrapod II
$15

Available from Amazon

Manufactured by Pedco






Comments

 
#1 | Thu, 02-18-10 05:46
derf

Yup. The Ultrapod roolz. Cheap, too. Cool Tool!

I have the Panasonic TZ5 and use my Ultrapod and the 60sec exposure mode of the camera to take killer star/meteor shots.

 
#2 | Thu, 02-18-10 07:31
Bruce Horn

I have both Ultrapod models and a Gorillapod and I like all three. The smaller Ultrapod is really nice with a small digital camera because it fits easily in a pants pocket. I use it with a Pentax Optio s5z. It works well strapped to poles or on top of tables, etc. The one big disadvantage of any of these mini tripods is that you cannot always place the camera where you want it to be. You have to compromise on the location of the nearest pole or table.

 
#3 | Thu, 02-18-10 09:26
Bernie Bernbaum

Yay, Ultrapod! I've had mine for years. It's sturdy, simple, and I've had a things as large as a Vx-2000 strapped to it.

 
#4 | Thu, 02-18-10 03:53
dave9

+1 on the ultrapod. I've used one for a while and appreciate the ability to strap to a pole. I used to carry around a Manfrotto clamp with a ball head to serve the same purpose, the ultrapod is much lighter which makes more sense with the new ultracompact digital cameras.

 
#5 | Sat, 02-20-10 07:01
Webb

I love the Ultrapod! It's small enough that I carried one with me on my cross-country bicycle ride. Can't recommend it highly enough.

I use an Ultrapod II with my SLR, and commonly use my Ultrapod as a flash stand, triggered with cheap Cactus remotes.

 
#6 | Mon, 02-22-10 01:07
Patrick

I totally agree and echo Bruce Horn's comment that the small model ultrapod (which I've owned for ~8 years) is fantastically portable. I've looked at the gorillapod a number of times but always felt like it would be bulkier than I'd want. So my choices for portable stability, in order of decreasing convenience / ascending bulk: 1) compact ultrapod, 2) DIY "string tripod" 3) real tripod.

 
#7 | Mon, 05-03-10 04:51
Doug Erickson

I find Clamperpod to be a lighter, smaller, cheaper alternative superior in every situation except maybe the 70-MPH tunnel shot.

 
#8 | Thu, 09-02-10 09:18
Dave Land

I like the UltraPod: bought one for about $10 or $15 at the Sierra Trading Post outlet in Reno this summer, but the Velcro strap's non-Velcro portion is *just* a little too long to secure the UltraPod to a hiking pole or staff. It wants to slip down all the time. I'm looking at putting rubber strips inside the legs so that it'll grip better.

 

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