Pro:
+ Good workmanship and material selection
+ Battery compartment is freely accessible even when mounted hand strap.
+ Thanks to internal thread in Anschraubrad the camera also with mounted hand strap on a unchanged positioned tripod socket.
+ Thanks explicit support points on the mounting plate is the camera even when using a tripod usual straight.
+ Large leather palmrest provides a good fit.
+ Position the mounting plate can be varied 20 mm in depth, thanks to long hole.
+ Excess lashing strap is visible in the back of the palm rest.
+ A shoulder strap can be also necessary in the normal position.
+ Alternatively, can also be mounted on the free left Gehäuseöse and on the left side of the screw-on shoulder strap ends but so that the camera then hangs down with the handle side.
Contraindications:
- The control buttons up near the shutter release can hardly be reached by the index finger because of the near-lashing strap.
- Since the lashing strap is only 26 mm attached to the bottom side of the tripod thread, the wrist strap and thus the entire camera can down very far to commute back and forth, which gives an uncertain grip while carrying.
- With mounted hand loop the parked camera tilts about due to the small mounting plate to the front and is undefined with the front edge of the lens or screwed-on filter.
- The Sony SLT cameras have a bottom battered swivel display, which is why this is necessarily the fixing plate in the way -. For example, for a vertically shots above the head or close to the ground.
Personally, I am not convinced of this wrist strap, because my expectations were not met at such a high-priced product and outweigh the negative characteristics.
Alternative: The far more favorable meymoon leather hand strap is almost identical. The favorable order 2/5 Sony STP HS1AM (simpler to the smaller palmrest nearly identical) is worth considering. From Hama Hand Strap Pro I can only advise, however, since it covers the battery compartment, to desire the feel of the hand rest leaves much and screwing the camera pushes wrong when using a tripod.