How this idea was born was through having worked with a Liquid Rubber Roofing Compound brand name "Enkopur".
The construction project had a delay due to lack of certain materials, this allowed for a period of boredom or creativity, I chose the latter.
I had a notion that if the Liquid Rubber did not get any air contact it would not cure as it is a one part product not in need of a activator to set of curing.
I then thought that this could be used as a liquid damper, if it were in a airtight compartment.
After a few, Hmm, Hmmm, Hmm, sessions, it clicked, I moved on from a Hi Fi application and brought it into my photography realm.
My first thoughts with out any thought on how it would allow functionality, would be to paint a Alumnium Tripod with it, giving a external rubber coating that when cured would be a possible damping for tube resonances. This was abandoned as a task as I soon worked out the
Tripod would end up with function restrictions due to the external coating.
It was more important for me to attempt to keep the Compound in a Permanent Liquid State.
Then the idea came about of stripping the tripod down and filling the tubes with the Liquid Rubber.
The method evolved of how to achieve the task. It was a case of placing a tight fitting foam plug in the tube bottoms to support a Silicon Sealant. The Foam Plug and applied Silicon Sealant were to set in at a depth so that the items to be re-attached were not to be obstructed by the Silicon Seal. The seals were at each stage given 24 - 48 hours to achieve a good cure.
When a bottom seal was cured the Liquid Rubber was poured into the tubes via a funnel to a predetermined fill level. Then the foam and Silicon Sealant was applied to the top of the tube to make a airtight compartment. On the tripod I used there were three tubular section for each leg so a total of nine Liquid rubber sealed tubes.
The Feet, Leg Slide Control and Top Plate Connectors had to be reattached to the tubes. The void left in each tube where these components were to inserted or clamped were filled with Silicon Sealant and the components were submerged into the fresh silicon, this is a little messy and a little soapy water applied to the silicon sealant will assist in cleaning the over spilled residuals of the silicon sealant. Any silicon on the bolt threads of the reattached parts is best cleaned after the nut is fixed as it will be a very secure nut with the silicon bonding it to the thread.
The Cast Top Plate was reattached and the trials began.
A standard set of engineers tripod legs were set up along side our modified damped legs. A lake with wildfowl was in the distance, a engineers level was mounted on both tripods and the focus was on the birds. The legs were tapped with a metal bar, to create a vibration,
the out come was night and day, the damped legs were exceptional, the focus on the birds was almost unaffected in relation to lens shake.
On close in static subjects, the damped tripod was a even better success.
On a later date there were high winds gusting to more than 50MPH, this was known as the crane operations were stopped due to wind speeds. We took both tripods to a exposed to the wind area and set them up. All I can say is you feared for the standard tripod in the wind,
it wanted to go over, no such concerns with the damped tripod due to the added weight, as for lens shake issues it was doing great again.
Stage Two,
A precast top plate may be a good platform for a engineers level weight about 1- 1.5 Kg. For Long Telephotos, this plate modified to work would still be a concern and a detractor from the enjoyment of using the tripod.
I purchased a 120mm x 120mm x 30mm Aluminium plate to be machined into a new top plate.
I also purchased a 200mm x 30mm x 30mm Aluminium Bar to be cut to suit and machined into the legs hinge attachment points.
After being let down by a Metal Engineers workshop to carry out the work and a delay of about a year due to this, I have resumed the work in December 2016 as a DIY project. The arrival of the 400mm f2.8G has prompted this. If all goes swimmingly well, l hope to have it functioning in January 2017.
This is not intended to be a travel tripod, it is intended for home use and what I refer to as "out the back of the vehicle usage".
I would think that with it rigged with camera,lens,gimbal, it would, with regular stops when walking, be acceptable to hike a few kilometres as a round trip.
So far due to owning the original tripod/Silicon Sealant/Enkopur and not incurring any machinery charges, I have about £70 outlay in Aluminium, and I expect about another £10 for cosmetic finishing as the Legs are Luminous Yellow at present.