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The 360 Degree Photography Turntable is a high-capacity, electric rotating platform designed for professional photography. With a 7.87-inch diameter and a robust 44-pound weight capacity, it allows for customizable rotation angles and automated shutter control, making it perfect for creating stunning product animations. Compatible with Canon cameras and controllable via app or software, this turntable is a must-have for any serious photographer.
Weight Supported | 44 Pounds |
Material | Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS) |
J**S
Performs as expected, extremely versatile
The ComXim 360 photography turntable is very easy to program and automate. The shutter chord provided did not fit my NIKON 7100, and I had to buy a 3 dollar adapter at Radio Shack to convert my cable for my remote switch to fit it. I don't own a Cannon camera so I can't tell if the provided chord works with their products. I think the chords provided would have been too short anyway. To realistically give you the flexibility to set up a light box, It needs to be at least 3 to 6ft long depending on your light Box. Just expect to find or make one on your own. You'll be happier in the long run. The hole for the connector is the same size as my old Sony Walkman head phones if that helps.My only other suggestion I'd pass on to ComXim regarding the product is move the silver product label to the bottom of the device. For now, I use a white platform on top to cover the chords and the label from ending up in my shots. I really want to avoid as much post editing as possible. Thinking about it though, the white is more of a cream. If you want to match your background or if you're doing chromatic separation you'll be using a green mat on top of it anyway.Bottom line, all of this very minor and easy to work around. It's really nice to focus, and frame your subject and press the play button and watch it take the shots. I use Adobe Light Room to crop the batch and I've written an Apple Script to run them all through photoshop to reduce them down to sizes appropriate for the web. Where it took me an hour to do this poorly by hand and with post, It now takes about 5 to 10 minutes from start to finish. It's worth every penny.A few tips for everyone: Before you shoot, put the table in continueous mode and watch it rotate through your camera. Balance the lateral movement of your subject as much as possible. Keep it centered and your cropping will be a breeze.
M**R
lasted less than a minute
The turntable arrived in it's original box and not in an Amazon boxThe turntable looked and felt solidIt came with a power adapter, a USB cable, two Canon camera cables and an extension for those cablesThat extension was a pleasant surprise as some customers noted that the camera cables were ridiculously shortThe manual is in Chinglish and makes no sense whatsoeverThe pictures do helpI connected my Nikon cable for my D600 and started the turntable (empty)All worked fine via the remote for about a minuteThere was a Pffft sound inside the unit and I could no longer control the turntableThe problem is the main unit and not the remoteTested the remote and the remote does send an IR signalI tried to download the app via the Android store but it's not thereLuckily the manual has a QR code that will bring you to a Chinese websiteAfter fiddling and making some guesses the app downloadedHurrah, I could control the turntable from my Android (via Wi-Fi)Well … kinda sorta as the Android app crashes every minuteThe windows app was a little more stable but has the interface of a 1970's DOS programThat being said, it does workI did put 40lbs on the platter and the motor did not struggleThat is quite impressiveTested it with my Nikon D90 and my D600 and have no issuesThis could have been a nice device if it would have lasted longer than a minute
C**S
Great for Photogrammetry
Bought this specifically to use for Photogrammetry. It works great. I have a Canon Rebel T6. I am shooting small objects for 3D printing. I set up a light box and have the camera on a tripod. The turntable works flawlessly so far. I can set the rotation to how ever many degrees I want each picture taken at. The auto shutter works in sync with the turntable. I am right now using it to take a picture every 11.25 degrees. That is 32 turns to make a circle, doing this by hand would be cumbersome. The turntable turns 11.25 degrees and signals the camera to snap a picture and stops once it has completed 360 degrees. I can just walk away and work on some thing else.Cons: The documentation is pretty bad. I had to do a lot of experimenting with buttons on the remote to figure out how to do things.
K**M
Doesn't Work Correctly With Nikon Pro Cameras
[EDIT:] I was finally able to get the automatic shutter feature to work with my D850 by stripping and manually splicing the Nikon and Comxim cables together. The issue with the audio adapter that I’d bought was that it was only a two-wire adapter, and the Nikon/Comxim cables were three-wire cables.Now that it’s actually working, the turntable functionality with just the remote is pretty nice. But I’m only going to add one star due to Comxim not including even a generic 2.5mm to 3.5mm adapter in the box. Since I had to make a $20 Nikon-compatible shutter release cable unusable with its original remote to get the turntable to work. If I’d done that to an actual first-party Nikon cable it would have been 3-4x as expensive. [end edit]The listing says to buy a Nikon control cable from their store. But there is no store, and none of their listings here on Amazon show such a cable. So I bought a 3mm to 2.5mm adapter in order to get the automatic picture-taking functionality to work. Only it doesn't work on my D850. Or rather, the shutter will fire ONCE, and the camera will only make slight clicking noises thereafter. Power-cycling the camera, or unplugging and re-plugging in the cable is the only way to get it to trigger ONE more shutter release.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
1 day ago