Tripod suggestions

Tim McCoy

Veteran member
Dec 15, 2014
1,855
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Oregon
Scored a great deal on a Vortex Razor HD spotter now I am looking for a quality tripod. Any suggestions?
Those come in a variety of sizes and weights. Which one did you get? Larger scopes need heavier tripods to keep wiggles to a minimum. The Vortex offerings are solid. Pick one with a weight capacity about 50% or more than your scope weight and you have a good starting point.
 

wildstreak

Member
Nov 24, 2014
82
1
Kentucky
Those come in a variety of sizes and weights. Which one did you get? Larger scopes need heavier tripods to keep wiggles to a minimum. The Vortex offerings are solid. Pick one with a weight capacity about 50% or more than your scope weight and you have a good starting point.
I got the 20-60x85.
 

mcseal2

Veteran member
Mar 1, 2011
1,171
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midwest
I like the Outdoorsmans compact medium or Promaster 525 with the Outdoorsmans pan head on either. The Promaster has a removable leg that can be used as a trekking pole that can come in handy packing meat the first trip if regular trekking poles aren't carried.
 

Alabama

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Feb 18, 2013
1,395
191
Sweet Home Alabama
For the Promaster guys: why do you favor the XC525c over the XC325c? It looks like the 3 section one would be less cumbersome and easier to set up than the 5 section one. It folds down smaller I guess?
 

grizzly

Active Member
Dec 3, 2013
195
1
UT
For the Promaster guys: why do you favor the XC525c over the XC325c? It looks like the 3 section one would be less cumbersome and easier to set up than the 5 section one. It folds down smaller I guess?
I like the compactness of the folded xc525c. I also run the Outdoorsman panhead on mine and it is a great setup with an 88mm scope. For lighter weight scopes (or binos only) it is tough to beat Sirui T-025x and T-024x.
 

mcseal2

Veteran member
Mar 1, 2011
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midwest
Exactly the same as above for me. I'd have a hard time going back to the ball head though, my buddy runs the Siru and I sure like having separate locking tilt and pan adjustments for grid glassing.
 

grizzly

Active Member
Dec 3, 2013
195
1
UT
my buddy runs the Siru and I sure like having separate locking tilt and pan adjustments for grid glassing.
The T-025x and T-024x both use a ball head with a separate adjustment for panning only. That's a hard feature to find in a lightweight ballhead.

Edit: fyi... the 25 folds smaller but doesn't have a sliding center post, it's fixed. The 24 is longer when folded but has a fully adjustable center post.
 
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LaHunter

Active Member
Aug 24, 2012
322
0
N.E. LA
For the Promaster guys: why do you favor the XC525c over the XC325c? It looks like the 3 section one would be less cumbersome and easier to set up than the 5 section one. It folds down smaller I guess?
The compactness of the 525c can be an advantage, if space is at a premium. It looks like the 3 section weighs the same as the 525c, and has the same load capacity. I have gone to the Suriu VA-5 fluid head. Drastic improvement over the Promaster pan head in every way, but it weighs a few ounces more. The head moves very smoothly and locks in place with no drift.
 

Alabama

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Feb 18, 2013
1,395
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Sweet Home Alabama
Thanks for the quick responses guys. I was thinking it was more compact. I was searching the net for the best deals and I accidentally ordered the 325. I didn't realize it until it arrived and honestly I loved it and kept it. It was a huge step up from my previous set up. I was second guessing my decision to keep it after reading this thread. I knew the weight was the same and just wondered why the 525 was so highly favored. I don't really love the head and I'll look into changing it out before this fall.
 

grizzly

Active Member
Dec 3, 2013
195
1
UT
From left to right... Sirui T-025x ________ Sirui T-024x _________ Promaster T525P (now XC525C)

Tripod1_.jpg

Tripod2_.jpg

Tripod3_.jpg

The T-025x is using the included Sirui Ballhead with the Outdoorsman's Tripod adapter attached to the Sirui plate. I removed the center post as it is non-adjustable and I felt it made the tripod unstable. The tripod weighs 30oz.

The T-024x is modified as I removed the Sirui quick-detach plate and attached the Outdoorsman's Quick Release Adapter directly to the Sirui ballhead. I did this to remove potential failure points and to eliminate unused weight. Also, it makes it so I can use my bino's and scopes interchangeably between this tripod and the Promaster, depending on the situation. It weighs 32oz.

The Promaster T525P has the Outdoorsman Panhead. It weighs 45oz.

I bought the T-024x and Kowa 554 to use while backpacking as the entire setup weighs 3.8lbs. The Promaster and Kowa 883 weigh 7.4lbs which are great when the extra power and light-gathering ability are an absolutely necessity but are pretty heavy on long hunts.

Hope that helps.
 

mcseal2

Veteran member
Mar 1, 2011
1,171
195
midwest
Looks like a sweet set-up. I got the little Kowa too, maybe I should look at a lighter tripod set up for it too on those hunts with long hikes. I sure like glassing off the Promaster with the Outdoorsmans pan head though, I even tried the Outdoorsmans micro and couldn't make myself like it after using the regular pan head. I do glass with binos off the tripod regularly either my 10x Leicas or 15x Swaros.

How do you like the ball head with binos? Having the separate pan adjustment maybe it wouldn't be so bad.
 

jmwyoming

Active Member
Feb 28, 2013
240
111
58
Lost springs wy
I use the vortex summit ss-p. It is a pan head very smooth horizontal and vertical adjustments. folded length is 14 inches, extends to 54 inches. weighs 2 pounds. I use it on my vortex razor 16-48. rock steady tripod
 
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