Hi
Just thought I'd warn people about Tilta battery plates ( i bought one on ebay , so have no idea if its genuine )
Since frying a few monitors and a couple of camera's it started to dawn on me that the problem may be something to do with the battery plate .
After twiddling around a bit with my multi-meter i found that when I was using the Tilta battery plate with its power switch in the OFF position , there was a voltage of around 12 to 13 v across the SDI connection between the camera and the monitor .
This is when i have the monitor powered by the D-tap and camera powered by the 12v outlet.
On turning the battery plate switch to the ON position the voltage leak disappeared .
I first suspected something was amiss on observing the led on the plate light up , when the power switch was off and i connected the bnc between camera and monitor .
I tested powering the camera and battery with another vlock plate ( by different manufacturer) and this stray voltage anomaly didnt happen -
Today I took the blown monitor in for repair and a technician ran several tests on the battery plate
to confirm that there was indeed some kind of short circuit fault in the circuit board and power switch . And this was likely at the heart of the cause of fried monitors and cameras.
So there appears to be a fault with the Tilta battery plate I bought on ebay .
The voltage leak is a fault either by design or in manufacture , something you wouldnt expect or naturally test for .
My Black Magic MFT camera is back at Black Magic uk being tested and repaired .
I have to say everyone has been very helpful and very communicative in this investigation.
I think it may be possible to re-wire the battery plate and avoid the switch and circuit board which i think is just a voltage regulator i dont need (as i wont use the other outlets ) . As my other plate is very simple and doesnt have this in and works fine.
I do like the design of the Tilta plate and ergonomically it works beautifully on my rig . So if i can just solve the wiring problem all will be great . And i can hopefully feel more reassured using it on shoots without embarrassing moments of having to explain duff monitoring situations whilst having cold sweats .
cheers
Marcus
Just thought I'd warn people about Tilta battery plates ( i bought one on ebay , so have no idea if its genuine )
Since frying a few monitors and a couple of camera's it started to dawn on me that the problem may be something to do with the battery plate .
After twiddling around a bit with my multi-meter i found that when I was using the Tilta battery plate with its power switch in the OFF position , there was a voltage of around 12 to 13 v across the SDI connection between the camera and the monitor .
This is when i have the monitor powered by the D-tap and camera powered by the 12v outlet.
On turning the battery plate switch to the ON position the voltage leak disappeared .
I first suspected something was amiss on observing the led on the plate light up , when the power switch was off and i connected the bnc between camera and monitor .
I tested powering the camera and battery with another vlock plate ( by different manufacturer) and this stray voltage anomaly didnt happen -
Today I took the blown monitor in for repair and a technician ran several tests on the battery plate
to confirm that there was indeed some kind of short circuit fault in the circuit board and power switch . And this was likely at the heart of the cause of fried monitors and cameras.
So there appears to be a fault with the Tilta battery plate I bought on ebay .
The voltage leak is a fault either by design or in manufacture , something you wouldnt expect or naturally test for .
My Black Magic MFT camera is back at Black Magic uk being tested and repaired .
I have to say everyone has been very helpful and very communicative in this investigation.
I think it may be possible to re-wire the battery plate and avoid the switch and circuit board which i think is just a voltage regulator i dont need (as i wont use the other outlets ) . As my other plate is very simple and doesnt have this in and works fine.
I do like the design of the Tilta plate and ergonomically it works beautifully on my rig . So if i can just solve the wiring problem all will be great . And i can hopefully feel more reassured using it on shoots without embarrassing moments of having to explain duff monitoring situations whilst having cold sweats .
cheers
Marcus
www.marcuswaterloo.com