Ultralight Tripods, By Matt Cashell

Justin Crossley

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If you are looking for an ultralight tripod, you will want to take the time to read this review. Matt compares three great models to help you decide which to go with. Check it out!

Ultralight Tripods, Tested and Reviewed
 

Macintosh

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Would love to hear these compared to 1 or two of the “go-to” benchmark products in this class for context. Ie what is currently the best or your favorite out there in this category, what is the best economy option, and how do these 3 compare?
 

Matt Cashell

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Would love to hear these compared to 1 or two of the “go-to” benchmark products in this class for context. Ie what is currently the best or your favorite out there in this category, what is the best economy option, and how do these 3 compare?

What would you consider a “benchmark” ultralight tripod?
 

Macintosh

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@Matt Cashell I dont know, thats why I asked. In a general sense I meant a benchmark as in “it’s the model that everything else gets compared to”. Perhaps NL pures in binos, or maybe el’s at a lower price point. But not knowing my way around UL tripods at all, was just looking for market context to put those three in. Are these the best of the best in the category, are they solid mid range options (price, weight, size, stability), etc?
 

Matt Cashell

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@Matt Cashell I dont know, thats why I asked. In a general sense I meant a benchmark as in “it’s the model that everything else gets compared to”. Perhaps NL pures in binos, or maybe el’s at a lower price point. But not knowing my way around UL tripods at all, was just looking for market context to put those three in. Are these the best of the best in the category, are they solid mid range options (price, weight, size, stability), etc?


In the past, tripods in this size and weight range were pretty flimsy. The tripods in this review are not flimsy.

The part of the market for stable ultralight tripods is relatively new and rapidly expanding. I tend to think a true reference standard ultralight tripod has yet to emerge.

I presented the testing in this article so readers could see if any of these models would work for their needs.

If it helps I could rank the tripods against each other in different categories from this comparison:

Space savings:

1. MM
2. Slik
3. MTN


Weight:

1. MTN
2. Slik
3. MM

Stability:

1. Slik
2. MTN
3. MM

Value:

1. MTN
2. Slik
3. MM

As far as a favorite, the Slik was the one I grabbed the most often, just because it was so well-rounded in performance.
 
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Justin Crossley

Justin Crossley

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This is the benchmark in this class IMO.


One of my best gear investments ever.
 

Matt Cashell

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This is the benchmark in this class IMO.


One of my best gear investments ever.

That’s a great compact tripod, but it is kind of in the next class up in weight IMO, especially compared to the Slik and MTN.
 

TheTone

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I’m more interested in the MM head. Thoughts on what light head to buy if it was maybe used 80% glassing with binos, 10% with spotter and maybe 10% shooting. Wanting to stick with a pan head; MM, outdoorsman’s, tricer, nighthawk? Wanting to dump some weight off my current manfrotto
 

Matt Cashell

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I’m more interested in the MM head. Thoughts on what light head to buy if it was maybe used 80% glassing with binos, 10% with spotter and maybe 10% shooting. Wanting to stick with a pan head; MM, outdoorsman’s, tricer, nighthawk? Wanting to dump some weight off my current manfrotto

The Outdoorsman’s is the reference standard for hunting heads, imo.

The Wiser is my favorite ultralight panner.

The MTN Nano is the best value going, and by a lot.
 
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Hello all,

Big thanks to Matt for putting this together, Justin for the support, and everyone here who has taken the time to read the article!

If anyone has further questions about our tripods, features/specs not covered in the article, or questions about Mountain Minimal in general, please respond here or email us at [email protected] – we can chat on the phone if desired as well.

We look forward to further supporting the hunting community while we take the trail less traveled by designing and manufacturing our products from scratch with your backcountry experience in mind!

Thanks again!

Braden
Founder, Mountain Minimal
 

Macintosh

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In the past, tripods in this size and weight range were pretty flimsy. The tripods in this review are not flimsy.

The part of the market for stable ultralight tripods is relatively new and rapidly expanding. I tend to think a true reference standard ultralight tripod has yet to emerge.
Thanks! This is exactly the context I was looking for, this is really helpful for me to put the whole review in perspective. Appreciate the reply!
 

MBounds69

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If you are looking for light, I strongly recommend that you check out Tricer!
I have the Tricer BC, inverted legs, sit to stand (up to 64”), 26.4# capacity, weighs 33oz. I shoot my heavy rifles off of it, very solid. Also love their Tricer LP head that weighs 4.5oz
 

Matt Cashell

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If you are looking for light, I strongly recommend that you check out Tricer!
I have the Tricer BC, inverted legs, sit to stand (up to 64”), 26.4# capacity, weighs 33oz. I shoot my heavy rifles off of it, very solid. Also love their Tricer LP head that weighs 4.5oz

I also reviewed those last year:


I agree that those looking for a lightweight tripod would do well to look at the AD. Bonus it is much better for standing use than any of the three in this article.

I kind of arbitrarily draw my line for the ultralight category at 2 pounds. The AD is a little over.

Sure, the MM is really close in weight to the Tricer AD, but the MM still comes in under two pounds, and as noted in the review, just folds to insanely small dimensions.

As far as heads from Tricer, the LP is a good ultralight head, but the heavier 12 ounce BP is just awesome:

 
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