tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7439013386414903935.post968615462840230461..comments2024-03-23T20:56:40.825+00:00Comments on A Blog on the Landscape!: Peak Designs Capture V3 camera clip.AlanRhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07180571503542781921noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7439013386414903935.post-89047469289564572492021-03-06T09:56:05.918+00:002021-03-06T09:56:05.918+00:00Hi Alun, thanks for your comment. I was aware of t...Hi Alun, thanks for your comment. I was aware of this failure point and I asked Olympus what they thought. I didn’t get a reply. However I searched forums and other sites to see if I could get an idea of the size of failure but I couldn’t get any failure data. I decided to go ahead and use it hoping that the failure rate was small. Also we don’t really know how the failure happened or what the real circumstances were. It is an expensive failure and one I am not taking lightly obviously. My Olympus is the MK 2 btw. I only have 2 lenses the 14-150 and the 45mm. AlanRhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07180571503542781921noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7439013386414903935.post-80652517227908117152021-03-05T12:54:23.061+00:002021-03-05T12:54:23.061+00:00Hi Alan
As you use a plastic bodied E-M 5 presuma...Hi Alan<br /><br />As you use a plastic bodied E-M 5 presumably a Mark 3, I thought that I would make you aware of the following discussion. https://www.dpreview.com/forums/post/63815284<br />How many people have suffered from this problem and what lenses they had attached I don't know, but it has put me off using a PD clip on my E-M 10.<br /><br />Cheers<br />AlunAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16482071297863194146noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7439013386414903935.post-33550597203910560192021-01-13T22:31:57.490+00:002021-01-13T22:31:57.490+00:00Thanks Alistair, much appreciated.Thanks Alistair, much appreciated.AlanRhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07180571503542781921noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7439013386414903935.post-80356806464344208052021-01-13T21:50:15.775+00:002021-01-13T21:50:15.775+00:00Hi Alan
Great review, something for me to consider...Hi Alan<br />Great review, something for me to consider...useful to hear from someone with first hand experience.<br />Thanks again<br />AlistairAlhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03631117697022610772noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7439013386414903935.post-42473689388410395312021-01-13T20:20:10.291+00:002021-01-13T20:20:10.291+00:00Hi Geoff, the wheel goes round as they say. I too ...Hi Geoff, the wheel goes round as they say. I too had a DSLR, then a 4/3rd when they first came out. Then numerous compacts. Now I have a Nikon 1 J5 which is a wonderful hiking camera and a 4/3rds Olympus OMD em5 which I love and is what I use daily. It’s plastic bodied with a good lens and is fully waterproof. Neither camera puts so much strain on the strap as to be a problem but I can imagine lots of DSLRs would if you were hiking.<br />The Sony RX100 is a very good camera. As you images show.AlanRhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07180571503542781921noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7439013386414903935.post-4393089547892645002021-01-13T19:38:25.841+00:002021-01-13T19:38:25.841+00:00I believe that was one of the mounts I considered ...I believe that was one of the mounts I considered a few years back, either version 1 or 2, when I carried a DSLR. It looked well engineered and very neat and small for its load capacity, but I didn't want the weight pulling down on the shoulder strap.<br /><br />Much as I loved that Canon DSLR with 'L' lens, eventually I gave up and succumbed to a modern compact (Sony RX100) that would fit in my hipbelt pocket.<br />GeoffChttps://v-g.me.uk/noreply@blogger.com