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#413472 - 06/13/08 12:23 AM
Re: Trying to Decide on an Digital SLR
[Re: etyppo]
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Vice Admiral
Registered: 03/02/06
Posts: 177
Loc: Colorado
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I have a fair amount of experience with digital SLR's, I've owned the XTi, my wife has the D40, and I currently have the Canon 40d.
Personally I'd stay with Canon or Nikon. Having said this, both make excellent products and the choice between the two is very subjective. The Nikon D40 fit my wife's hands much better, and I actually like the feel of a larger camera. I would recommend going to the store and actually trying out the camera's yourself.
Finally, without knowing what kind of photographer you are it is impossible for me to make any additional recommendations. With a DSLR, it is often as much about the lenses as it is about the body. Some people love their superzooms, and others demand higher image quality, low light capability, and/or more creative control and don't have the budget limitations that most of struggle with.
_________________________
Paul
Glastron GX 205 5.0L GXi Toyota Tacoma
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#413475 - 06/13/08 03:28 AM
Re: Trying to Decide on an Digital SLR
[Re: Colorado2718]
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Nautical Alchemy
Admiral
Registered: 01/14/03
Posts: 11513
Loc: Battle Creek/Grand Haven, MI
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Nikon...
(Paul Simon didn't write no songs about no Canon cameras).
I have had a Nikon D-70 since 2004, and really like it. One of my coworkers just traded his D-200 in for a D-300. I had thought about buying the D-200, but the D-70 works well enough that I didn't see the advantage.
When I started out in the camera hobby in the '70s, I used to have a Canon SLR.
When it came time to buy my first automatic film camera, I went Nikon. I was a bit upset that all of my manual Canon lenses were not compatable with the newer (at the time in the early '90s) Canon bodies.
But with Nikon, a lot (but not all) of their lenses - even some made in the '60s can be used on the digital bodies. Nikon publishes a chart showing which lenses are compatible with which bodies.
I like that feature, as your old equipment is not obsolete. And, you can go on eBay and buy an old manual focus 400mm film camera lens really cheap and quite possibly mount it on a digital Nikon. And with the CCD size difference, it actually becomes an equivalent of a 500mm lens.
While you are limited to the functionality of the particular lens - i.e. if it is a manual focus lens, you lose the auto-focus function - it can be easier to buy a 400mm lens for $50 than a new one for $900 - espcially if its only occasional use.
When I upgraded from my film Nikon, all of my AF-D lenses works with the D-70 with 100% capabilitiy. So I didn't lose my investment; other than putting my film body in storage (where it will probably remain forever).
But in reality, with high-end DSLRs, either Nikon or Canon is going to be great. You cannot go wrong with either choice.
_________________________
"Yesterday's Dreams"1995 Carver 325 Aft Cabin  Posts are amateur opinion only. You assume all responsibility for any action you take as a result of reading my posts.
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#413986 - 06/15/08 08:34 PM
Re: Trying to Decide on an Digital SLR
[Re: trooplewis]
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Captain
Registered: 07/06/04
Posts: 111
Loc: Houston
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The more I look at the E-520, the more I like it. I've looked at the 3 tiers of lenses on the Olympus page ( http://www.olympusamerica.com/cpg_section/lens/dea/products/lens/index.asp), but haven't seen the associated prices. I don't know how good the "standard" lenses, but it seems like a wise thing to do would be to go to the "high grade" lenes (if I can afford it). I imagine the "super high grade" is way out of my league. I bought my first SLR system about 30 years ago, and at the heart of it all is the Canon AE-1. I still have it all (lenses, flashes, filters, etc. etc.), and it all works fine. So, I have come to like the Canon stuff. However, I've had two 35mm cameras made by Olympus, and they still work fine. Nikon has a very good reputation, so that is why I've been looking at them. I saw a guy's Nikon D40x with the 18mm - 200 mm lens and was very impressed. I don't know how fast the lens was, but the guy really liked it. I also don't know how the quality of the lens compares with the "standard" or "high grade" lenses made by ZUIKO for the Olympus, so I've got more research to do. The only thing that the Nikons don't have that the Canons and Olympus do is the sensor cleaning feature. Can any of you comment on how important it is to have this feature? Is it a gimmick? Does it work? Is it necessary? Does it degrade the image by electronically editing the original image?
_________________________
2000 Sea Ray 180 BR 2000 SeaArk 15 2000 Expedition
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