The problem with using the older plastic mount is that it ends up with your GoPro further back than with the new mount. This in turn means that you get your landing legs in your shots when shooting in "wide" mode.
rilot said:The problem with using the older plastic mount is that it ends up with your GoPro further back than with the new mount. This in turn means that you get your landing legs in your shots when shooting in "wide" mode.
rilot said:Wind Shear, which holes are you using to mount? I could only get 2 holes to line up and it set the gimbal a lot further back than yours.
OneJoe said:thanks for your thoughts @MenaceCat. Although I don't expect DJI to reply any time soon, I think I might have found a replacement but it's very, very expensive. And I'm embarrassed to say that the part is, in fact, aluminum .. not plastic. (A DJI dealer pointed this out to me)
But I do understand your "crush zone" concept. Better to lose a small, mounting part than the precision parts of the gimbal itself.
I'm no metallurgist but I find it surprising that a piece of aluminum would "crack" like a piece of plastic. Makes me think it was either designed to do that or was defective.
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