Edelkrone SliderOne Pro + Motion Box Review

TL;DW[atch] -- I know, this is a long one video. Skip to: 00:44 -- StandOne overview 02:56 -- Flex Tilt Head 2 overview 04:40 -- SliderOne Gen 1 06:36 -- SliderOne Gen 1 vs Gen 2 09:22 -- Using SliderOne Pro with Sony FS5 + Sigma 18-35mm 13:52 -- SliderOne Pro slide examples 15:49 -- SliderOne Pro with Motion Box setup 19:08 -- Parallax examples (10-50% speeds) 20:13 -- Final thoughts on SliderOne Pro + Motion Box If you prefer to read, here ya go: Before getting into the review, I give a quick overview of Edelkrone's Flex Tilt Head 2 and StandOne [both are great products in itself in keeping your shooting rig real small and portable]. Coming back to the SliderOne, I've had the previous [1st Gen] version [see review here    • Reviewed: Edelkrone’s SliderOne + Motion M...  ] and while it was great in doing slides, I've always wished it could do parallax movements and here comes Edelkrone's Motion Box. It unfortunately only works with the newer SliderOne Pro which is why I ended up getting the entire kit. With this Motion Box for the parallax effect at slower speeds, I currently rate this setup 3/5 stars. Edelkrone did reach out and is going to replace my unit as I didn't know that other users had exhibited the same issues I had and so Edelkrone had replaced those with slower motors for smoother movements. It does a great job but at the moment with this version, anything slower than 50% was really unusable. Then again, I'm using a pretty heavy rig (Sony FS5 + Sigma 18-35) with the Flex Tilt Head which only has a recommended load limit of 5.5lbs lol I can try without using the Flex Tilt Head on top of the Motion Box which is on top of the SliderOne but the fact that Edelkrone has addressed the Motion Box's motors leads me to believe that it is Motion Box motors causing the jerkiness at slower speeds. For me, this is every shooter's dream to have something this small be so capable of slides, parallax movements, and timelapses all automated and of course repeatable. My goal was to not use Red Rock Micro's One Man Crew due to its size and this thing can deliver if the motors at slower speeds work. -- Shot on Sony RX10 mk I with Rode VideoMic Pro; colorgraded with FilmConvert