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Your cart is empty.The Transport Rolling Tripod/Grip case is available in 38 and 48-inch lengths. Each case in hand-built in Tenba's Brooklyn, NY factory to provide the best protection available. Custom-made, air-channeld ABS walls and ballstic nylon exterior ensure amazing durability, and heavy-duty, ball bearing wheel assemblies make it easy to move heavy tripods and stands.
ABP Films
Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2019
I bought this to fit all of my tripods & light stands into one case and this gets the job done.I am able to fit both my Benro Aero 7 tripods in there along with a monopod, 2 lightstands, a mic stand, and 2 sandbags and it could probably fit a 3rd lightstand if I needed to.It is very sturdy & even water resistant...it go soaking wet from the rain the other day but when I opened it up everything inside was dry as could be!Only complaint is that I think the wheels at the bottom could be a bit bigger/better. Does great on concrete but really struggles in grass/dirt compared to my pelican case which has better wheels. But that is a nit-pick.
Uniltirantokx
Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2019
I now own six (6) of these cases, and have traveled with some of them across the Atlantic several times. They survive the luggage handling and luggage handlers very well. They do get classified as oversize, so the standard gate check-in might not work (especially at Queen's Terminal 2 at Heathrow).Only trouble I've ever encountered is being questioned by airport security in the US as to "...why do I have so many guns?" Not guns, but tripods and light modifiers. LOL
Mattsphotography
Reviewed in the United States on December 11, 2018
This is hands down the best way to travel with tripods and light stands. I have tried so many bags and this one takes the cake. I filmed over 100 weddings in 2018 and this thing still looks like it's in great shape.
Vwgn
Reviewed in the United States on September 15, 2017
Insanely good case. The price is initially a tad bit scary (I think weve all been burned by crappy lightstand bags that looked promising), but when you see how well this holds up to repeated, constant airline travel, and how handy it is traveling to locations, it's worth every penny.I have this bag loaded to around 80 lbs with stands and grip equipment, and check it on flights regularly and it hasnt failed in any manner. Leaving the airport it has wheels and handle so I can roll it with my pelican carry on, and avoid the $5 cart rental.Note: It wont hold a c stand unless you have the removable base versions, and the bag is into oversized category on most airlines due to linear dimensions. I condensed 2 bags worth of stuff into this one so it was a wash in that respect for me. YMMV.
Teshorn Jackson
Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2016
Just paid $200 to check this bag on my flight. I'm returning it.
EATENalive
Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2014
I am primarily writing this review because I bought this impulsively and looking back I may have searched for a different case. I will start by giving my impression of the case and follow up with where I made mistakes. The case feels pretty sturdy and has some nice features inside with side pockets, straps in the bottom to tie down stands or tripods, a pocket in the lid etc... I do not often have a need to travel with studio gear but I did want a place to store some stands and grip gear rather than piling it loose into a closet, I also like the notion that I can be ready to go if I do have a job I need to travel to. Where I failed in my quest for a stand case was in that I did not measure all of my equipment first. I have some c-stands with a rocky mountain leg - the base on these stands does not come off like those with a turtle base. For some reason in my mind the stands would fit in this case with the bases attached but they do not work that way. The bases have to come off because the case is not wide enough or deep enough for them to go in attached to the case. Some simple measurements would have told me this. After making this obvious mistake I ran to the local equipment store to buy one additional stand to load in the case for an upcoming job I will be traveling to, and again made a basic measurement omission and bougth a 40" kupo c-stand kit. I know better than to believe that the 40" measurement is the entire length of the riser but in my mind a 40" stand had to fit in the 48" case but the riser in the kupo kit is 51" and it does not fit. So my word of caution is to not assume your stand measurements are good to go and that you measure them before impulsively buying this case. That having been said, this case is great at holding lots of gear. I have fit the following gear in the case:1 40" matthews c-stand, a kupo 20" c-stand (though the base is pushing it in the side pocket it almost pokes up too far), 2 westcott kit stands from a profoto compact kit, 4 sandbags, a large softbox with a speedring, 2 westcott medium umbrellas, a profoto deep umbrella L, diffusion for the profoto umbrella, a 7' westcott umbrella, 4 grip arms with heads, a pile of clamps, and theres probably some room for a few more small items. This all weights a fair amount even when rolling the stand so if I had one thing I would want to add to this stand it would be a method to strap the end over a shoulder rather than just a handle on the end, but it will do the trick so long as I dont have many flights of stairs to deal with.
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