Hi All Bought the Zhiyun Crane Z1 from PV with the Bluetooth remote. Arrived on Saturday and after playing around with it for a few hours I took it out to a shoot. Working really well so far, gimbal, app and remote.
![Crane Crane](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125611863/400361622.jpg)
Instructions were all in chinese but there's enough setup videos to see how to get the hang of balancing it. Using the G7 and Olympus 12-40mm f2.8. After a couple of practices set up is really quick.
Once balanced for te camera on all axis, the only balance you need to change when dramatically changing focal length is the camera's position on the screw thread to stop it flopping. Quick and easy to do between shots with negligible downtime. I will report more when I've had more use with it. Bought one of these via Personal-View a couple weeks ago, been having a lot of fun with it! Using a GH4 and 7-14 f.4, I've taken it on a couple of jobs where we had plenty of time for B Roll and achieved some really nice shots. Are there any tutorial videos available that show the uses for the different operation modes (Roll, Yaw, Pitch)? Would like to expand my knowledge of shot possibilities, haven't found many specific videos outside of reviews and tests so far - great piece of kit, highly recommended, will post some videos that feature Crane shots once they're signed off by clients.
Sep 26, 2016 Zhiyun has provided Apple’s MAC system driver and windows driver for downloading. Download zhiyun usb driver (mac osx), tools (mac osx), and firmware for Crane. Thank you for using ZHIYUN CRANE 2. CRANE 2 is a high-precision control device. About: Displays software version and stabilizer model information.
Having done an article for 'Digital Production' in German, I decided to translate it for you. Here we go: The Zhiyun Crane Z1 – How Good is a Chinese Gimbal Now? It has been a year and a half that I tested a Pilotfly H1 and you needed a lot of time to make it ‚fly‘ decently stable.
Not only mechanical balance with the help of a hexagon key was fiddly and needed high precision. You’d have to adapt control parameters too after any change of weight and that needed even more patience until it became stable. Even then the gimbal would start to vibrate erratically if you needed a steeper vertical angle or only bumped into something. To get a gimbal for day-to-day use in a professional environment you needed considerably more money to buy products from Freefly or DJI. But now there is the Zhiyun Crane for a test flight My main criteria are all those connected with ease of use in a serious production, not something for people who are into fiddling with new technologies. Capacity and Balancing The gimbal weighs a tad under 1 kilogram without batteries.
Once you have charged these with the included USB-charger you put them into the handle and screw the handle into the base. This takes quite few turns, but it is very important that nothing has play in a gimbal, so that’s fine with me. The construction looks and feels very well made. Regular weight limits are 350 to 1500 grams since firmware 1.5. But you can load an alternative firmware for cameras up to 1800 grams, aiming at users of DSLRs like a Canon 5D. For lighter cameras you’ll need to change firmware back to the general version, though.
We had no problems balancing a Sony A7S with a heavy, but compact Minolta 21mm prime with a weight of 1260 grams. But the weight of such a combination alone is not the only limiting factor: like for a dancer engaging into a pirouette or an astronaut in zero-G the distance of mass from the center is very important! A heavy and long lens, maybe even with an adapter, which is moving the weight far from the center can introduce too much rotational inertia.
With such a setup the motors may have difficulties tracking your motions fast enough. Other than older gimbals the Crane will not go into erratic behavior, but you may feel a small push in the handle and that will introduce a small bump into the shot. The space for adjustment is pretty good with the Crane and there are three slots in the base plate to choose from. Nevertheless there will always be some cameras and lenses where things get tight, like the heavier Sony A7R II. It can be balanced, but it’ll get so close to the tilt motor that the door for the SD card is blocked. Of course, this is the fault of Sony, not Zhiyun, since they changed their construction. The slot of the lighter A7S goes to the back and the door poses no problem.
Or have a look at our BlackMagic Pocket camera with a beautiful Angenieux 20 to 80mm, which is blocked by the roll motor, so the tilt rotation will be limited. You’ll always encounter some combinations that stay well in the weight limits but don’t fit perfectly. Anyway that’s not the fault of this gimbal. Balancing is really quick, with some practice you can stay well under 5 minutes and if you are only changing lenses with similar weight you’ll be even faster. Like with any gimbal you work from the inside first: roughly balance the camera on the plate, then adjust the balance for tilt by moving the L-bracket up or down. You may need to fine-tune the position on the plate after that. Next is balancing roll and finally horizontal pan.
Always remember to fix the screws carefully or something may slip and you’ll need to start over. If you need to be really fast and your combination is not too close to the weight limit, you can even balance things a bit sloppy – the Crane can handle it! Activation and Stability A longer press on the small, golden button until the light gets steady and your Crane will be activated. After two or three seconds the controller has booted and the camera literally jumps into position, i.e.
It points horizontally to the front. In our case calibration was perfect from the start without any further adjustment, we could see no deviation from the „artificial horizon“ of our Sony A7.
Those who remember endless tuning of the first generation of SimpleBGC-controllers can breathe with relief. The Crane is not based on this standard platform (or it’s far better 32 bit successor) but a genuine development. According to Zhiyun there are three 32 bit MCUs working at 4 kHz – pretty impressive parameters. In our tests the Crane was quite insensitive to touching the camera or lens, it went straight back into position when left alone instead of going into erratic somersaults. If you want to reduce stress on the motors and save energy, you can send it into standby with a longer press on the joystick. Removing a forgotten lens cover or adding a thin cable doesn’t impress the Crane very much, but nevertheless good balancing will reduce stress on the motors and power supply.
Like any other gimbal the Crane will only compensate rotational movements, not any up or down motion – you’ll still need to learn how to walk for smooth shots. In the end you’ll be rewarded by very stable motion. The Crane stabilizes so well that you may use it instead of a tripod in a pinch, even with longer lenses which you can’t move smoothly by hand any more. Minor jitter of the hand could then be compensated in software. We could never feel or see any jitter introduced by the Crane, only a high pitched sound became audible at close distance if it was balanced really badly – a proof of the high working frequency. If properly balanced there was no sound from the gimbal at all. Energy consumption depends on the amount of motion, but if you put the gimbal on a tripod and leave it on, it’ll run for about 6 hours with the standard batteries.
Even with a lot of pans and running about it would run much longer than our Sony or BM Pocket camera. Controls With wider lenses control by joystick works quite well. The first mode is „Pan Following“, where only horizontal movement is softly following your hand, while tilt and roll are fixed.
Up or down pans can be initiated by the joystick. One short press on the joystick gets you into fixed mode, where all the axes are stable in relation to your hand, but the joystick now controls tilt and pan. Going into „briefcase“ mode needs no change at all, you just flip the handle over and the controller is sensing your intention. The camera stays stable and you can achieve very low positions in one fluid motion – impressive! A short double press of the joystick gets you into „Pan and Tilt Following“, so the camera will softly follow your hand in both axes.
The joystick controls roll now, so you may simulate motion of a bike or boat. Even if you can operate movements with the joystick quite well after some practice it could be too much for one person.
Zhiyun is offering a simple remote as an option, but you can use both Android or iOS smartphones with a free software as a remote. The „Zhiyun Assistant“ offers quite precise control of all axes via bluetooth plus adjustment of any parameter you may wish to change (it evens monitors your battery). Some cameras by Sony can be controlled for shutter, start/stop and even zoom (with a motorized lens) by a USB connection from the port next to the tilt motor. A few models by Panasonic offer shutter and start/stop. Finally there’s another app called „Zhiyun Camera“ which will make the main camera follow a person by face tracking from the smartphone’s video mode. This works pretty well and can be a great help for lonely warriors documenting a presentation and needing some cut-away footage.
![Driver Driver](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125611863/255960398.jpg)
They can put one camera with the Crane on a tripod and have it follow the presenter and be running around with a second unit for some more interesting coverage. The manufacturer is still working on a software for panoramic shots, one may even hope for a version with time-lapse panning – at least that should not be such a big feat with this gimbal. The thread in the base of the handle could also hold a magic arm for an external monitor or a wireless transceiver. If all that may get too heavy: Zhiyun is offering a well-made dual handle too.
All in all, the Zhiyun Crane Z1 is pretty close to perfection, you don’t need to spend more than that for a gimbal that can carry most video capable photographic cameras even with a bit heavier lens and make them fly!
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