CINESTAR 3 Axis Brushless GIMBAL system & Handheld
Steadicam 4mm 3k carbon fiber, for Hover fly, Cinestar, Droid works, DJI S800 adaper avaleble, Electronics may be shipped separately, Free shipping
by DHL/Fedex registered mail available for latin America
Item is in stock while it lasts. When item is out of stock
please allow 28 day before Item is Shipped
Comes with:
1 x 3 axis gyro-stabilized
handheld camera gimbal
1 x BaseCam (AlexMos) SimpleBGC 3-axes stabilization kit
3 x iPower GBM5208-150
Gimbal Brushless Motor or similar motor
1 x GT POWER RC Model LED Servo
Tester for “Majestic Modeâ€
2 x Maxforce 11.1V 2000Mah Li-polymer Battery For
Transmitter (Row) for power
1 x FlySky 2.4G 9CH Radio Model
Transmitter&Receiver
1 x FPV aerial/with a monitor support for 7-8 inch
monitor TVMTTX
1 x USB to AV Conversion Cable for
Gopro3 Camera W/Power Input
1 x 5.8G FPV 2W 12 Ch 2000mW Wireless Audio
Video Transmitter
1 x Boscam RC701 All-in-one monitor + FPV wireless
receivers + Diversity
1 x 3 Axis Brushless Gimbal Landing gear
The
MoViXX is a “digital 2-axis gyro-stabilized handheld camera gimbal.
†This
thing weighs less than 3.5 pounds and is completely silent. No apparatus is
required to operate it, but an additional gimbal operator with a joystick is
available if you wish to capture certain camera effects. The MoViXX allows you
to run, jump, slide, skip, and probably double backflip without the fear of an
unsteady camera or shaky image.
Just to hit the implication home: it is
lightweight, silent, and versatile enough to capture shots that usually require
a dolly, tripod, or other heavy and burdensome stabilizers that requires
herculean strength to operate (score one for me). Here’s a video demonstrating
how the MoViXX works. Come on back after you put your jaws back in place:
gyro-stabilizers, it’s very rare that I look at a demo video of new gear
with my jaw all the way on the floor, but after watching one for the new
handheld stabilizing system called the MoViXX, I simply couldn't help myself.
The MViXX utilizes gyro stabilization and accelerometer technology that, when
seen in action, seems less like a mechanism and more like magic. Think of it
this way: it’s basically like your handheld rig is now a Steadicam, and pretty
much anyone can learn to use it in minutes and get footage that normally would
have required years of experience. Sound scary and wonderful?