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SmallRig Amazon Prime Day Sale Starts Now. Save Up to 30%

SmallRig has activated its Amazon Prime Day promotion. Up to 30% off across more than 40 photo and video accessories, live on Amazon.com.

SmallRig Amazon Prime Day Sale Starts Now. Save Up to 30%

The verified price drops

PetaPixel published specific cuts on the Tribex support lineup. Six line items, all from the same source block:

  • Carbon fiber video tripod, hydraulic legs, 4-step counterbalance fluid head: $800 → $560. A flat $240 cut — exactly 30%.
  • Aluminum equivalent, same Tribex hydraulic quick-deploy system: $400 → $300. $100 off, 25%.
  • Compact carbon fiber travel tripod, one-touch height adjustment: $200 → $150. $50 off, 25%.
  • Fluid head tripod with DJI RS gimbal compatibility: $400 → $300. $100 off, 25%.
  • Carbon fiber video monopod, 175cm, 360° fluid head, dual-mode quick release: $400 → $300. $100 off, 25%.
  • Full-size aluminum video tripod with quick release plate: $160 → $112. $48 off, 30%.

Two of six hit the advertised 30% ceiling. The rest sit at 25%. Treat "up to 30%" as a marketing maximum, not a baseline yield.

What to verify before checkout

Discount depth is only useful when the baseline list price holds. Cross-check the SmallRig MSRP against B&H, Adorama, or the manufacturer's own storefront. A 30% cut on an inflated list does not equal 30% real savings — that's the tolerance that matters.

The Tribex carbon and aluminum tripods share the same hydraulic quick-deploy system and similar fluid head geometry. Pay for the material and load tolerance difference, not duplicate branding. If you already run a DJI RS-series gimbal, prioritize the RS-compatible fluid head tripod; otherwise its spec overlaps with the standalone Tribex models.

Amazon third-party seller stock fluctuates during Prime Day windows. Newsshooter explicitly noted that prices are subject to change and each product page should be re-confirmed at point of purchase. Hard add-to-cart, don't bookmark.

Caveat on provenance

Newsshooter disclosed this piece as sponsored content. The price figures are factual and reproduced directly from the sponsor's data sheet. The framing — "best time to get the gear you need" — originates from SmallRig, not editorial. Read it as a price event, not an endorsement.

Sale runs through the Prime Day window. If an item already on your kit list hits the 30% tier against a verified MSRP, it's a rational buy. If it's at 25%, pull the last 90-day Amazon price history before committing — that's the only benchmark that yields a defensible decision.