The pin can probably be removed (unscrewed). I think the bogen QR plates I
used had a similar pin. The sliding L shaped plate on the one Moose pointed
out is similar to the architectural plates bogen sold. If I hadn't converted
to Arca Swiss style plates I would have replaced all of the bogen plates I
had with the architectural style.
-jeff
----Original Message Follows----
From: Moose <olymoose@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Now Chuck, that's not the one I linked to. :-) That one does indeed
require a specific hole in the camera base to work. I believe that is a
feature of at least some video cameras, but not still cameras.
The one I linked to has a sliding bracket. You just slide it up against
the camera body before finishing thighening down the tripod screw. Very
simple, flexible and does a nice job of precventing rotation
<http://www.bhphotovideo.com/bnh/controller/home?O=productlist&A=details&Q=&sku=113843&is=REG&addedTroughType=search>.
Moose
Chuck Norcutt wrote:
>How does the stabilizer pin on this QR plate work? Seems like it would
>require a hole in the base plate of the camera for it to drop into to
>preven rotation?
>
><http://www.bhphotovideo.com/bnh/controller/home?O=productlist&A=details&Q=&sku=150475&is=REG&addedTroughType=search>
>
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