Home · FAQ · New Posts · My Posts · PMs · Search · Members · Members Map · Calendar · Profile · Donate · Register · Log In |
Home > Off Topic > Digital SLR/Bridge cameras |
|
|
The Doctor Member Since: 09 Jul 2010 Location: Gallifrey Posts: 4615 |
Planning a big holiday to Las Vegas, LA and San Francisco in May 2014 and will be investing in a Digital SLR camera before then. Any recommendations here? I have always been partial to Panasonic with the Leica lens but any pointers would be appreciated. LL.B (Hons) - University of Derby
|
||
18th Jan 2012 10:39 pm |
|
mojo Member Since: 06 Feb 2010 Location: Outta here. Posts: 365 |
Canon for me - Had an EOS 30D for four or five years now, been very good, latest version is the 60D I think. Depends what you want to spend though. I would always stick with Canon or Nikon. Spent 8 years working in a camera shop back in the good 'ol days of 35mm and would always recommend Canon or Nikon. By the way, always better to spend the money on the lens than on the body in my opinion, so if you are on a budget, cut back on the camera body and go for the best lens you can afford. Panasonic do get some good reviews in the press though, but don't be fooled, it's not a 'real' Leica lens, from what I remember they were 'designed by Leica' but not made by them. If they were, the cameras would be ten times the price! Best advice though is go to a shop and play around with a few to get an idea what you like. Some nice looking smaller system cameras around like the Olympus PEN range if you don't want to lug a full size SLR around with you but I haven't got any experience of them to say what the picture quality is like. Also, don't forget that more megapixels does not always mean better quality, the optic has a lot to do with it. My Canon is 8 megapixels but is very sharp. |
||
18th Jan 2012 10:51 pm |
|
Pegleg Member Since: 15 Apr 2010 Location: Deep in mid Wales Posts: 3114 |
Good advice mojo.
|
||
18th Jan 2012 10:59 pm |
|
realspeed Member Since: 26 Mar 2011 Location: East Sussex Posts: 574 |
I have a Nikon D300 and its brilliant. However just don't look at camera prices lenses can cost a small fortune. On top of that there is the memory card to buy as well. I would suggest a Sandisk 8gig card minimum extreme 111 version.
|
||
18th Jan 2012 11:09 pm |
|
mojo Member Since: 06 Feb 2010 Location: Outta here. Posts: 365 |
Every one of my memory cards is SanDisk. I don't bother with anything else and they have never let me down. As realspeed says, go for the Extreme range as they are water / dust proof to protect your precious pics. Picstop are normally fairly cheap for them as are mymemory and of course, the beloved Amazon. |
||
18th Jan 2012 11:12 pm |
|
The Doctor Member Since: 09 Jul 2010 Location: Gallifrey Posts: 4615 |
My full techincal knowledge of computers is limited, is this any good Pegleg?: Hardware Overview: Model Name: MacBook Pro Model Identifier: MacBookPro8,1 Processor Name: Intel Core i5 Processor Speed: 2.3 GHz Number of Processors: 1 Total Number of Cores: 2 L2 Cache (per Core): 256 KB L3 Cache: 3 MB Memory: 8 GB LL.B (Hons) - University of Derby LOT (Lord of Time) - University of Gallifrey |
||
18th Jan 2012 11:14 pm |
|
Pegleg Member Since: 15 Apr 2010 Location: Deep in mid Wales Posts: 3114 |
Lens - I love the old Nikon 70-210 F4- 5.6D type.
|
||
18th Jan 2012 11:17 pm |
|
Pegleg Member Since: 15 Apr 2010 Location: Deep in mid Wales Posts: 3114 |
Doc,
|
||
18th Jan 2012 11:21 pm |
|
The Doctor Member Since: 09 Jul 2010 Location: Gallifrey Posts: 4615 |
319.73 GB LL.B (Hons) - University of Derby LOT (Lord of Time) - University of Gallifrey |
||
18th Jan 2012 11:22 pm |
|
Pegleg Member Since: 15 Apr 2010 Location: Deep in mid Wales Posts: 3114 |
You'll be okay for a while, but you'll fill your HDD quickly as RAW files can often be 10-16mb per image.
|
||
18th Jan 2012 11:31 pm |
|
The Doctor Member Since: 09 Jul 2010 Location: Gallifrey Posts: 4615 |
Thanks for the advice LL.B (Hons) - University of Derby
|
||
18th Jan 2012 11:35 pm |
|
realspeed Member Since: 26 Mar 2011 Location: East Sussex Posts: 574 |
What can confuse with a DSLR is whch setting to use RAW or JPeg or Tiff . OK so whats the difference between RAW and Jpeg? Forget Tiff unless you what to produce large posters and memory hungry
|
||
18th Jan 2012 11:37 pm |
|
wdw Member Since: 13 Oct 2008 Location: Reading Posts: 127 |
They do but they cost an arm and a leg. I agree the 70-210 is a great lens and frequently available s/h for comparatively little. But it won't focus on those Nikon bodies without a screwdriver focusing attachment. Back to the Doctor's original question, before you buy, make sure you hold the cameras you're interested in to see if they feel right in your hands. I've used Nikon for more than 30 years and all the models I've had (film and now digital) have seemed to have the controls exactly where I want them for my style of photography, but others clearly find Canon and other makes suit them. Bill |
||
18th Jan 2012 11:44 pm |
|
realspeed Member Since: 26 Mar 2011 Location: East Sussex Posts: 574 |
The biggest learning curve is the relationship between shutter speed -ISO and Aperture as all three are closely linked together as they all concern the amount of light getting onto the camera sensor. Again my advice after using Auto mode, where we all start from, is use the Aperture setting next and then shutter speed falls into place. The highter ISO setting produces "noise" or in other words pixalisation "showing spots" so the lower the ISO setting the clearer the picture,most cameras start from 100/200 ISO.
|
||
18th Jan 2012 11:49 pm |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis