When I first picked up my Sony FX3, I shot with it handheld for about two weeks. No cage. No top handle. No HDMI clamp. Just the camera and a lens. It was liberating — and also a disaster waiting to happen. On day twelve, my HDMI cable yanked out mid-interview. On day fourteen, I nearly dropped the camera because there’s nothing to actually grip on the left side.
I decided to fix the problem properly. Not by buying some $800 Wooden Camera rig, but by methodically building a SmallRig ecosystem piece by piece. Total cost: under $300. Here’s exactly what I bought and why.
Why Rig Your Camera at All?
A camera cage does three things: it protects your camera, gives you mounting points for accessories, and makes the whole system more ergonomic. For the FX3 specifically — which is essentially a miniaturized cinema camera — a cage transforms it from a mirrorless body into a proper working tool.
Brandon Li, whose one-man-band travel films are some of the most impressive on YouTube, put it simply:
“Your rig should solve problems, not create them. Every piece needs to earn its weight. If you can’t explain why something is on your camera in one sentence, take it off.”
— Brandon Li, Filmmaker & YouTuber
That philosophy guided my entire build. Every component I’m recommending serves a specific, practical purpose.
The Build: Piece by Piece
1. The Foundation: SmallRig FX3 Cage ($79)
The SmallRig cage for the Sony FX3/FX30 is the most thoughtfully designed cage I’ve used. It wraps the camera body precisely, with cutouts for every port, the LCD flip-out, and the battery compartment. You don’t need to remove the cage to change batteries — which sounds basic but plenty of cages get this wrong.
It adds 1/4″-20 and 3/8″-16 threads on every surface — top, sides, bottom. ARRI-standard 3/8 locating pins on the top plate mean NATO handles lock in with zero play. And the whole thing weighs just 158g. That’s lighter than a lens cap from the 1980s.
2. Top Handle: SmallRig NATO Top Handle ($29)
The SmallRig NATO top handle was the single biggest ergonomic upgrade. It clamps onto the cage’s NATO rail in about two seconds — no tools needed. This gives you a comfortable carry grip, a low-angle shooting position, and a safe way to hand the camera to a PA on set.
I use the basic NATO handle (not the folding one). It has a cold shoe on top for mounting a mic or small monitor, and the rubber grip is comfortable for extended shooting.
3. Baseplate: SmallRig Universal Baseplate ($45)
The SmallRig baseplate adds an Arca-Swiss compatible quick release plate to the bottom of your rig. It also drops the center of gravity slightly, making the camera feel more balanced on a gimbal or tripod. I use this when I’m on the DJI RS3 Pro — the extra 15mm rod mount points let me add a follow focus if needed.
4. HDMI Cable Clamp ($12)
This piece costs twelve dollars and has saved me from catastrophe at least a dozen times. The cable clamp attaches to the cage and creates a strain relief for your HDMI cable — so if someone trips over the cable or it gets snagged, the force goes to the cage, not the HDMI port. Sony repair quotes for a damaged HDMI port start at $350. This clamp is the best ROI in filmmaking.
5. Cold Shoe Mount & Mic Bracket ($18)
I run a Rode NTG5 shotgun mic on top of my rig via a cold shoe-to-1/4″ adapter. SmallRig’s cold shoe mounting system is compatible with standard hot shoes, so my Rode works perfectly. The dual cold shoe bracket ($18) lets me mount a mic AND a small LED simultaneously — useful for interview setups.
Total Cost Breakdown
| Component | Price | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| SmallRig FX3 Cage | $79 | Protection + mounting points |
| NATO Top Handle | $29 | Ergonomic carry/low-angle |
| Universal Baseplate | $45 | Quick release + rod support |
| HDMI Cable Clamp | $12 | Port protection |
| Dual Cold Shoe Bracket | $18 | Mic + light mounting |
| 15mm Rod Set (2x) | $15 | Future follow focus |
| Rosette Handle (left side) | $22 | Two-handed grip |
| NATO Rail (spare) | $14 | Monitor mount option |
| Total | $234 |
Under $300 with shipping. That’s less than a single prime lens, and it completely transforms how the camera handles.
What I’d Add Next
If you have budget remaining, here’s what I’d prioritize:
- An external monitor — the Atomos Ninja V+ mounts beautifully to the top handle via an articulating arm
- A bigger battery solution — NP-F970 plate for powering both the monitor and camera
- V-mount adapter — for all-day shoots where swapping batteries is unacceptable
Danny Gevirtz, whose documentary work consistently looks like it cost ten times the budget, once said something that stuck with me:
“The best camera rig is the one you stop thinking about. When your hands know exactly where everything is and you can focus entirely on the story — that’s when the rig has done its job.”
— Danny Gevirtz, Documentary Filmmaker
Common Rigging Mistakes to Avoid
Over-rigging: Don’t mount accessories “just in case.” Every gram matters when you’re shooting handheld for eight hours.
Wrong cage model: SmallRig makes cages for dozens of cameras. Triple-check the model number. The FX3 and FX30 cages are different.
Cheap cables: Don’t put a $3 HDMI cable on a $4,000 camera. Get a quality braided cable with secure connectors. I’ve seen cables fail mid-take on professional sets.
Final Thoughts
Building a camera rig doesn’t need to be expensive or complicated. The SmallRig ecosystem gives you modular, well-machined aluminum components that work together seamlessly. Start with the cage and top handle ($108 total), and add pieces as your needs demand.
My FX3 went from feeling like a delicate piece of glass to feeling like a professional cinema tool. And it cost less than a mid-range zoom lens.
Disclosure: This article contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, Film Gear Review earns from qualifying purchases. Our editorial opinions are always our own.
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
Mehedi Rahman is a freelance multimedia producer and impact filmmaker with 12+ years of experience. He has shot documentary and humanitarian work across Yemen, Bangladesh, and South Asia for the World Food Programme and international media. Based in Sri Lanka, he specialises in visual storytelling that moves people — and gear that makes it possible.

2 responses to “The SmallRig Ecosystem: How I Rigged My Sony FX3 for Under $300”
That HDMI clamp is the truth. Literally saved my FX3 from a $400 repair two months ago when a PA tripped on my cord.
Love the minimal approach here. Do you think the same basic setup translates well to the FX30, or would you change out the top handle?