 Hey, what is up? Welcome to the Crimson Engine. Today we are looking at the Ronin S and how to possibly add accessories to it to make it less cumbersome to hold the long periods of time. I have the Photo World Ronin Crossbar here. What it does is lets you brace your hands against your body and take the weight with both hands in a way that's much less onerous, much that makes the gimbal much less difficult to carry. If you have a small DSLR or even a large DSLR on this Ronin S, it's not really an issue. When it becomes an issue is when you mount something large like the C200 cinema camera on here and then suddenly you're carrying five or six kilograms in one hand or like right to the center of your chest. It finds four short shots but it becomes really difficult and it becomes a really hard workout when you have to do longer takes, longer shots, repeat them again and again. I posted my last review on the Facebook, Ronin S Facebook group. The people who make this contacted me and sent me one for free so thank you for that. But it is a huge improvement using the C200 with this. It makes it much less than I would say it makes it feel like less than half the weight because you're able to have your hands in a much more neutral position. You're able to let the weight sort of sit against your body and rather than the undulations of walking with one hand, you have them with both so you're able to use your elbows as more of shock absorbers. It makes the footage better as you can see here. Not that I'm any type of gimbal expert. You shouldn't take this as the smoothest footage can possibly be. I've really had less than an hour in my whole career operating in gimbal so I'm not the person to turn to for gimbal tips but I definitely have used this on a bunch of shots. It's got me out of some tight spots and it just really elevates what you're shooting without having to go full steady cam or bring in someone who has a Ronin 2 or a Movi 10 that has the capacity to carry this. This does work inverted but strangely enough it's the way that I had it just turned upside down felt even more difficult than the single-handed inversion. I think what I would need to do is invert the handles as well so that it's still resting on the side of your hand rather than you ripping it upside down. I mounted the monitor arm on one of the crossbars that worked great. Didn't seem uneven to me even though you're adding more weight to one side. The big drawback of this is that you can't really use the thumb buttons or the sports mode or even the record on the camera without putting the gimbal down so it takes away some of the advantages of the single-handed gimbal but it's still if you're working with someone else you can always just put it down the ground. I left the Ronin S little chicken foot on the bottom so I'm able to just put the camera down put it in the setting that I want pick it up again and get the shot and then put it down to stop recording. You won't be able to get through as narrow spaces. You see in some of the stuff I had to slow down to get through a gate because your arms are out by your sides now it's no longer you know you can't kind of turn sideways with it but you know more or less a huge improvement to the Ronin S gimbal system with a big heavy cinema camera for the majority of shots that you're going to want which is following an actor tracking beside an actor stuff like that so DJI will probably come out with their own version of this this is only 99 bucks if you are using your Ronin S a lot and finding out that you're needing to go to the masseuse more often than you usually do 99 dollars it could be good investment so that's the photo-weld dual handle grip for the DJI Ronin S. I'll leave the links in the description uh left questions in the comments and I will see you next time