Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB review

The Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB is one of four new Veo 3+ tripods that combine slick design with a clever multi-angle column

Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB
(Image: © Rod Lawton/Digital Camera World)

Digital Camera World Verdict

The Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB doesn’t feel that heavy for an aluminium tripod, and if you want to shave off a little weight, there is a carbon fibre (CB) version that’s only a little more expensive. The design and build are first class, the angled column works brilliantly and all the controls and adjustments have a smoothness and precision that you would expect to cost a lot more than this.

Pros

  • +

    Build quality and design

  • +

    Good maximum height

  • +

    Quick action leg locks

  • +

    Angled center column

Cons

  • -

    Quite long when folded

  • -

    A longer column might be useful

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Tripods come in all shapes and sizes and the Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB is very much middle of the road. It’s larger than than a travel tripod, but a good deal lighter to carry around than a big, old-fashioned studio tripod.

If you don’t mind carrying your tripod in a separate bag, the Veo 3+ 263AB is easy to carry around, though perhaps a fraction long to strap to a backpack.

We tested the Vanguard 263AB, which is the aluminium version with a ball head. You can also get a carbon fiber version (263AC) and the same choice of materials with a three-way head (263AP and 263CP).

Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB

The Veo 3+ 263 comes in both aluminium (A) and carbon fiber (C) versions. We tested the 263AB, which has aluminium legs and a ball (B) head. (Image credit: Rod Lawton/Digital Camera World)

Specifications

Tripod Style: Traditional Full Sized
Material: Aluminium
Weight: 2.45kg
Folded Length: 76cm
Maximum Height: 172.5cm (center column extended), 147cm (center column down)
Maximum Load Capacity: 15kg
Leg Sections: 3
Leg Lock: Easy Clean Twist Lock
Leg Angles: Three - 23°, 50° & 80°
Feet Type: Rubber/Spiked
Tripod Head: VEO BH-160Head TypeBall Head Arca Swiss Compatible
Accessories included: Tripod Bag, VEO MA-1 Multi-Mount Attachment, Hanging Hook

Key features

The VEO 3+ 263AB is a traditional size tripod with a far from traditional design. It has a clever angled center column mount which lets you rotate the column through a series of angled detents through to a full 90 degrees.

Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB

The legs offer three different angles, adjusted by pressing in a spring loaded button at the top of each leg. (Image credit: Rod Lawton/Digital Camera World)

Also included is a good quality padded tripod back and an interesting MA1 Adaptor attachment for sliding on to the center column and mounting additional equipment when the column is horizontal. This could be a second camera, microphone, light, external monitor or whatever you like.

The VEO 3+ 263AB has three-section legs which makes it longer when folded but a good deal quicker to set up than four- or five-section tripods. One of these legs can be detached and used as a monopod. The legs have rubber feet fitted as standard, but these can be swapped out for spikes, which are included. This is pretty good value when you take into account the padded bag and mounting attachment also included in the price.

Our sample came with the Vanguard VEO BH-160 ball head, which is a neat and robust ball head with a separate pan axis (though no friction control) and an Arca Swiss compatible quick release plate.

Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB

The BH-160 head does not have friction control but it does have a separate pan axis. The ball move smoothly and locks tight. (Image credit: Rod Lawton/Digital Camera World)

Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB

To angle the column you pull it out to its full height then release a clamp to change its angle. There's a panning axis to rotate the column (which now becomes a boom) without moving the tripod. (Image credit: Rod Lawton/Digital Camera World)

Build and handling

For an aluminium tripod, the VEO 3+ 263AB feels quite light. It’s true that at 2.45kg it is close to twice the weight of a small carbon fiber travel tripod, but there are plenty of camera and lens combos that weigh as much as this so, in absolute terms it doesn’t seem that much. The only thing counting against it for travel is its long folded length of 76cm.

Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB

That's a lot of knobs to have on one tripod. Fortunately, you soon work out what each one does and when you need it. (Image credit: Rod Lawton/Digital Camera World)

Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB

The Veo 3+ 263AB has three section legs, which means it's longer than many when folded but faster to set up and a little more rigid. You have to decide what's most important. (Image credit: Rod Lawton/Digital Camera World)

The leg angle catches look a little ornate but they work fine, and the ‘stiffness’ in the leg angle movement is perfect. The leg section twist locks are fast to use and lock securely and they can be dismantled easily for cleaning.

The center column action is smooth and locks quickly and securely, and if you pull the column out to its maximum height you can then release a side catch to change the column angle. This catch is a meaty lever with a locking button and requires some force – so you might bend back the odd thumbnail until you get used to it.

The column needs to be angled past 45 degrees to be able to move it freely up and down, but it’s smooth and locks securely, just as it does in vertical use.

Given that the legs are quite long, it’s a shame the center column isn’t a little longer than it is – though if it was any longer, it could probably topple the tripod when used horizontally at full extension, so this looks like a deliberate design decision.

Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB

With the column horizontal you can slide on the included MA1 Adaptor (on the left here) for attaching accessories. (Image credit: Rod Lawton/Digital Camera World)

There is an additional locking knob on the tripod ’spider’ and when the column is angled its use becomes apparent – you can loosen this and rotate the column mount on a horizontal axis. Even this movement is super-smooth, and simply adds to the feeling of engineering quality.

The BH-160 ball head is one we’ve seen before. It’s neat, strong and smooth, and while it doesn’t have a friction control (not everyone finds these useful – us included) it does have a separate pan axis. Best of all, it shows little or no ‘locking droop’ even with a fairy heavy camera-lens combo fitted. (This is when the camera drops slightly when you let go of it after tightening the ball clamp.)

Verdict

Vanguard Veo 3+ 263AB

It's easy to underestimate the value of an angled column/boom design. It makes low-level shooting easier and lets you get closer to objects where the tripod legs might otherwise get in the way – perfect for close-ups, macro and table-top photography. (Image credit: Rod Lawton/Digital Camera World)

You can certainly get cheaper tripods than this one, but they won’t have this level of sturdiness, versatility and smoothness. You can pay a lot more, too, but if you spend any time at all with the Vanguard VEO 3+ 263AB, you might wonder why you would.

Frankly, it does everything brilliantly. It’s fast to set up, smooth to operate, feels really solid and firm and has that excellent angle center column design. Vanguard seems to have discovered a knack for making really nice-feeling, quality tripods at compelling price points.

Read more:

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Rod Lawton
Contributor

Rod is an independent photography journalist and editor, and a long-standing Digital Camera World contributor, having previously worked as DCW's Group Reviews editor. Before that he has been technique editor on N-Photo, Head of Testing for the photography division and Camera Channel editor on TechRadar, as well as contributing to many other publications. He has been writing about photography technique, photo editing and digital cameras since they first appeared, and before that began his career writing about film photography. He has used and reviewed practically every interchangeable lens camera launched in the past 20 years, from entry-level DSLRs to medium format cameras, together with lenses, tripods, gimbals, light meters, camera bags and more. Rod has his own camera gear blog at fotovolo.com but also writes about photo-editing applications and techniques at lifeafterphotoshop.com