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Removu K1 4K UHD Video Camera with Integrated 3-Axis Self Stabilizer

  • Based on 159 reviews
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Availability: Only 1 left in stock, order soon!
Fulfilled by JDC Ent

Arrives May 14 – May 18
Order within 15 hours and 36 minutes
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Features

  • Removu K1 is equipped with the best 3-axis gimbal technology out there, which means you get clear 12MP images and super stable 4K Ultra HD video footage
  • K1 can capture your lifes moments in 4K ultra HD with the custom designed F2.8 wide angle lens
  • Thanks to the 50 centimetres focal length the K1 can perfectly focus close-up shots and the perfect self-portrait. In addition, the K1s 1.5 LCD screen allows you to monitor what your filming
  • The K1 is equipped with a powerful interchangeable 2900mAh smart battery, providing 4 hours of continuous filming on a single charge
  • 1 x Removu K1 with Smart battery, USB Cable; Pouch; User manual. Compatible with Micro SDHC U3 high speed memory (not supplied).

Description

The K1 3-axis gimbal with 4K camera from Removu is an all- in-one camera stabilizer, combining a handheld gimbal, 4K video camera, and a 1.5" Lcd Display. The K1's three-axis gimbal and image stabilization produce stable images whether you're capturing sports, travelogue, or other action footage. It's capable of 330° pan rotation, 120° roll, and 108° tilt motion. The integrated camera features a 12MP Sony CMOS image sensor and records up to Ultra HD 4K resolution video (3840 x 2160) at up to 30 fps, and up to 4000 x 3000 still images. The F/2.8 camera Lens has a wide 101° angle of view equivalent to a 35mm-format 17mm focal length. The K1's minimum 19.7" Focus distance and 1.5" Lcd Display screen make taking "selfie" Views a snap. Set Contains: 1 x Remove K1 with Smart battery, USB Cable; Pouch; User manual


Product Dimensions: 10.83 x 5.12 x 3.94 inches


Item Weight: 12 ounces


Item model number: RMK1


Batteries: 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included)


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: September 22, 2017


Manufacturer: Removu


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: May 14 – May 18

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Good for a first iteration
Size: Removu K1 Style: Removu K1
The media could not be loaded. I only compiled a couple of short footages so far, but overall impressions are positive for my use. Keep in mind, i am a casual user, just for making memories inside my family and related events. I am not going to shoot any sort of public/client stuff with it. Good: (in terms of importance to me). (1) Compact, can carry in pockets. I have sony a7Riii but i don't use it for video. Reason being, i can't carry that anywhere with ease. I don't even use my phone gimbal, same reason -- it is cumbersome to carry, has a long setup time. On the other hand, my 4k phone is compact, but is not convenient to hold for a longer time, or to shoot at levels other than eye level, and the shake is most discouraging. I was contemplating DJI Osmo (+) acquisition for some time now, but from the first glance i immediately knew that i would end up not using it just like my phone gimbal for the same reason -- it is too cumbersome to set up and/or carry. This one obviously has gimbal stabilization, is compact enough to fit in pockets, and even has a locking mechanism so that feels sturdy as one piece when stored in the provided pouch inside my pocket, rather than just a bunch of moving fragile parts like my other gimbal which doesn't even fit in a pocket. The screen is integrated and is not protruding much. (2) shoots 4k and pretty slick looking slow motion. (3) Stabilization. This is pretty good (in fact, better than any phone gimbal i ever tried) although there's a slight jerking motion in some situations, which hasn't been much of a problem though (yet). Can shoot at any level (ground to as high up one can reach). Great for creativity, filming kids, dogs, other subjects at their height. I found the pan mode the most useful. I also put it into "slow" gimbal setting -- this gives the most stability and compensates for unintended pan deviations most naturally imo. (4) integrated screen. For just framing purposes, this is plenty enough. Remember, you don't have to worry about horizon tilt (5) has time lapse (not very important to me). (6) external mike that can be mounted underneath it (7) robust feel. I don't like most of phone gimbals because of their thin handle. This one is shaped right, aside probably from zooming function. (8) zoom. In 1080p which is what i mostly shoot, the fact the zoom is digital is not very apparent, since it is interpolating from a higher 12mp sensor resolution. We just sort of switch to the "crop mode" of the sensor as we zoom in. Zoom itself is smoother than any 4k phone i saw, and, while is not absolutely cinematic, is quite usable. (9) internal mic sound is surprisingly good. i would be using anywhere except for windy environments which require a wind muff. Acceptable: (1) Oh, the distortion everyone was complaining about. Make sure to put 1.0.6 FW on it, it fixes the mid-frame horizontal non-linearity. Without it, it is unacceptable. With it, it is ok. Remember, this is a very wide angle once zoomed out, perhaps 17mm lense equivalent or shorter (on 35mm frame). Anyone remotely familiar with phtotgraphy knows any lens will not see face relief on a headshot photo the same way we see it until it is framed at at least 85mm due to angle. Humans do not ahve the same problem, because we have binocular vision so we see more of the both sides of the head than any single lens will ever do. And at the arm's length, 85mm would only capture a nose. It is ok however once one puts the _entire_ human figure(s) into the frame. Perhaps still a little of zoom-in could help to cut out extremes of the frame edges, at which point it becomes quite acceptable. Judging from video reviews, Osmo simply has a bit of a narrower view, but i think after the 1.0.6 fw update once you zoom at osmo equivalent length, there would be no such apparent difference (aside from Osmo's ability for a shallower DOF). I think if one puts it on a tripod, zooms a bit in and frames at upper body length at the center of the frame, as most people do for u-tube videos, it should be barely any apparent notion of a questionable distortion. Update: for 1.0.6, I have found that panoramic shot rotation at widest does require some further lens correction. In shotcut editor, setting lens correction filter with 1.0 correction at cetner and 0.4 at edges works great. although it will result in ~1.3x cropping of the shot. Of course I see thieir dilemma, as zoom is non-optical, so various zoom ratios require different lens correction amount -- so it is impossible to get a good correction amount for any given zoom ratio in post processing. But panoramic rotation without zoom, where it is the most noticeable, can be corrected. If there's no significant pan, i wouldn't bother much. (2) as just mentioned, forget about any sort of subject separation with a shallow DOF. For me it is not a problem, because i don't believe in subject separation unless it is at 2.0-ish wide at 85mm (on a 35mm frame) or longer, so i will not miss it on any system with lens of this size. Certainly I will not miss the Osmo-like DOF. If i want that kind of look, i will just take out my Sony A7R3. (3) 1080p 120 fps (slow-mo) could bear noticeable compression artifacts on out-of-the-camera samples, especially for faster and larger moving subjects (e.g. fast windmill spinners taking 35% of the frame or larger). For quality capture it would seem it is sutable for regularly moving objects which then can be played extra slowly, rather than for fast moving objects with the purpose of playing them back at a more registerable speed. Although truth to be told, fast moving objects are likely to have compression artifacts in 30 fps too, it's just we don't notice them unless the footage is slow enough for us to notice them. But slow-mo just slows it enough to notice. (4) zooming in and out with one hand is less convenient for repeated use than it seems at first glance. 2 hands use for zoom function eventually is needed. Not so good: (1) No automatic dynamic range adjustment or HDR mode. The range itself is no better than your average 4k phone camera, so on a sunny day one might easily end up with a contrast too high to ones taste. Shooting in shade, overcast, or at least partial shade seems to be necessary. Hope hdr of DR optimization could be added by a fw update. Otherwise, $400 seems a little steep for the video capability it gives out. I am pretty sure once market is saturated with this kind of gimbal device, this would not be competitive for this price. For now it is the only game in town in the class of compact integrated gimbals, so oh well... (2) my purple panda lavalier mic produces hissing noise. It doesn't do so in my samsung tablet, so it must be something about K1 that causes this compatibility issue. Didn't try Rode type, maybe it won't have that, or maybe my unit has a defect. It is not a super issue for me, as it seems to be easily worked around during editing by a notch filter set at 8.1kHz with 300Hz bandwidth. Yet, it is unusual and _is_ a nuisance. (3) switching between slowmo and normal frame (trigger+record combination) only works when not capturing. I wish it could switch while in the capture mode. Oh well. Conclusion -- I am sure this market will develop, but for now i know this is the only thing i will use for filming my kids frequently enough. Anything else is either too large, or too shaky to bother. Update: a few more complains for FW 1.1.1 Now with 1.1.1 there are 3 (W,M,N -- wide, medium, narrow i guess) field-of-view settings (FOV). Good idea but in practice it is just a crop. The 60fps (1080 or wqhd) is now only possible with medium FOV, no wide. Realistically that means that if one shoots in 1080p/60f fps (or even 30fps) the maximum zoom effectively drops resolution to an SD quality. Meh. Also video is a tad less stable with the zoom. Not really surprising as small deviations become more apparent, but it could have been better on a better quality gimbal stabilization. Not sure if zoom stabilization performance could be further improved with a firmware update. Including video showing the zoom use limitations as described (1080/60/M sample with post for comparison). The full resolution version Generally i am starting to think that this is a whole step behind DJI in every aspect except the on-board screen and price. Still keeping 4 stars because of some relatively unique features. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 19, 2018 by D.L.

  • I studied the options for several months before deciding to wade in with the Removu K1.
Size: Removu K1 Style: Removu K1
The media could not be loaded. As a Stills Event Photographer for the last 30 plus years, I am kinda late to the video game... Sure, I had a Sony Camcorder 17 years ago when my first born came down the pike, but video never grabbed me like shooting stills with a DSLR. (or SLR before that). The world progresses however and you have to look forward to stay in tune with the rest of the pack. Most of my professional photography involves shooting events, large and small for major charities, corporations and even small businesses. I started to feel the need to add video to my product line and I studied the options for several months before deciding to wade in with the Removu K1. My experience has been a learning curve but a positive one overall. I chose the K1 because of my previously, short lived & failed attempt, to use my cell Android phone and a gimbal to shoot video. I found that solution to be frought with delays and compatibility issues. From using apps not native to the cell phone to operate the camera, to the slow start up times... Cell Phone Gimbals and I just did not get along. This is why, when I found the Removu K1 I became quite excited. After looking at the DJI Osmo and envisioning the same Cell phone requirement and problems to make that product work, the built in screen and obviously faster start up time for the K1 sold me. My first unit came and then "bricked itself" (Removu Tech Supports terminology, not mine) but with Amazon customer service that was no problem. I returned the faulty product and purchased another. The 2nd edition of the K1 has worked fine for me in some fairly demanding environments, including live Parades shooting both in the streets and from a parade float - in Florida weather. I have also shot on location during live music events and done some pretty good interviews using the K1. Is this a $3,000 professional video camera? No, not even close... but to shoot video that can be used for social media or to document your travels, create a Vlog or document an event it is a really handy and frankly fairly worry free gizmo to have in your kit. (The Video added below only includes audio and video shot with the Removu K1 on a fairly dark stage setting with no additional video lighting, only stage lights (of varied colors). ) I have added a small and lightweight selfie stick/tripod to set up the Removu K1 and shoot time lapse video or pan entire rooms or events with the motion capture feature. I have hand carried the unit on the streets and shot video from moving vehicles and in no case did I think that my cell phone could have done a better job. My learning curve still has a long way to go before it peaks but I am feeling confident that the work product I am creating with the K1 is making both myself and my clients happy. What else can you ask for? OK - What don't I like? - Removu needs to update the firmware more often. I have some issues with the time lapse functions sometimes not ending when the motion has completed it's arc. (no biggie but I would rather the clip end at the end of motion). - Further improvement of the app is needed, I find that it is not reliably connecting to the K1 (or staying connected) and the live feed - well isn't. You are better off forgetting the app even exists and use the K1 as a stand alone hand held gimbaled action camera. - Adding the capability to live stream to Facebook or YouTube would be absolutely AWESOME! - We need Audio Level meters on the screen or a auto level setting for the audio. Quick tip: Set your audio to -6db and leave it there... Otherwise you will have horrible audio. Highlights of what I do like - The ability to recharge from a usb battery bank is AWESOME - I think the actual video footage is very good, cinematic in some ways. People are amazed what I am getting comes from this little handle with a ball on top. - Simple to use, fast to set up and you can shoot for hours on a single battery. These three features make this thing AWESOME! I did add the accessories kit and find that the External Mic is essential as is the lens cap. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 21, 2018 by Gasparilla Media

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