 Hey guys, I'm up here on Mitz Patel, which is a pretty beautiful hill in South Jerusalem. I came up here to check out the lupines that are blooming at the moment. And while I'm on this beautiful scenery, I thought this would be a great chance to do another little stabilization test of the Femi Pam II pocket gimbal, which is of course sort of a carbon copy almost of the DJI Osmo pocket. And the Canon Vixia HF-R800 because I have that camcorder alongside the DJI Ronin SC in my camera bag. So I'm going to replicate the process yesterday, except without the all the other gear I tried, including the scorpion grip, etc. So I'm just going to do like a 10 meter walk in this direction and then attempt to replicate the shot using the Vixia and Ronin SC setups. So here we go. Okay, so the Canon Vixia HF-R800 is on the DJI Ronin SC. I've recalibrated the gimbal since yesterday and taken off the microphone. So it should be a little bit easier to keep steady just to show you what the stabilization which this combination is like. This is I'm in mode one on the Ronin SC. I'm going totally handheld and I'm turning into the sun and I'm turning back and let me show you what the motors look like. This is me using the vertical motor here. There's a big antenna in fact right here they can just pan all the way up to. So this is me giving less pressure on the vertical motor here. I'm bringing the camera back down two clicks to return to home and then this is the horizontal panning. This is the fast horizontal panning and this is me nudging the joystick a lot more slowly. So let's come back to my backpack and I'm going to do the same walk as I just did here along the same stretch of turf. I'm then going to do a panning shot. So I'm trying as best as I can to keep the shot stable. I'm attempting something like a gimbal walk. Trying to keep my hands as steady as possible. Trying to keep my movements gentle and I've also got the powered IS turned on on the camcorder. So everything I can do to help assistability of the shot. I'm now panning across the same patch of sky. We're facing southward here so probably getting some lens flare and sun in the camera and now I've turned back and I'm going to end the shot as I ended the last shot just where my backpack is.