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Joe

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Posts posted by Joe

  1. I picked up the D1X last summer. Amazing how the prices of bodies deteriorate...when the D1X was new (circa 2001) it retailed for $8,000; I picked mine up for $300. Very nice body, though I wish it had interchangeable viewfinders like the F5 did.

     

    Ever since I bought a Katz Eye screen, i've been much more open to buying older non-AF lenses. In fact, this week i'm probably going to be looking at picking up a 400/3.5. Nice heavy, metal lens. Doubles as a club if someone ever tries to jack it from you!

     

    I wouldn't trust those plastic mounts at all either, the 18-55 kit lens (that came with my D50 when I still had it) was a plastic mount. As someone who habitually picks cameras up from the lens, I could see a heavy mofo like a D1X or a gripped D200 breaking the mount off.

     

    edit: just for kicks, some D1X awesomeness:

     

    4439322371_d6a31e2c3e_z.jpg

  2. I shoot with both a D1X and a D200. The focus motor in the D1X has ungodly torque, it racks the focus from one end to another on any lens with considerable force.

     

    You're absolutely right about QC issues with Sigma. One of the main reasons why i'm very leery about buying from them...though their 30/1.4 intrigues me very much. On a photo forum I frequent there was a thread about the Sigma 50/1.4. A few fellas had to return a lens two or three times just to get a good copy.

     

    The 35/2 has a plastic body just like the 35/1.8. At least my later AF-D copy is (though I believe the original AF version was plastic as well). Nothing beats the old (n-)AI(-s) lenses though, all metal construction FTW.

  3. So would you recommend something like this: http://www.amazon.com/Canon-35mm-Wide-Angle-Cameras/dp/B00009XVCU

     

    That looks like a nice piece of kit.

     

    For once we fully agree!

     

    LOL

     

    The Nikkor 35/1.8 is an excellent lens. I bought a 35/2 (its FX cousin) only a few weeks before it came out; was kind of bummed that I didn't wait. AF-S and an ass-gasket, two things that I wish I had now.

     

    How's that Sigma 18-200 working for you? I've used a similar lens (think it was a Tamron 28-300) and i've noticed that the autofocus gets hokey at f/6.3. The practical limit for AF is f/5.6 in almost all phase-detect autofocus systems, even on the high-end cameras.

  4. Exactly. In the tight confines of the subway, you'll want something more wide angle than the 50. The 35/f2 is a good choice and its not that terribly expensive. Even better would be something like a 24 or 28mm but anything faster than f2.8 gets spendy in a hurry.

     

    I use a 17-55/f2.8 in the subway; its similar in focal range to the kit lens but its f2.8 even all the way out at 55mm so it would be a lot better underground. However, even at f2.8 I'm usually shooting at something like ISO 800 to keep the noise and shutter speeds at an acceptable level. If I could afford a wide f1.4 lens I'd buy it in a heartbeat.

     

    What system do you shoot with?

  5. New DSLRs with video capabilities are one of the few examples where a cheaper implementation [of video] has resulted in a more flexible application as well as a final product that is literally "just as good". A 5D Mk. II can shoot 1080p30 video and has been used to shoot an episode of House. Plus it can use the full line of Canon EF lenses...that's a major improvement over previous digital video cameras.

  6. MNRR's third rail is very different from LIRR's third rail. LIRR's pick up is from the top (like the subways) and MNRR's us from the bottom. That's why the M8s have a retracting third rail shoe or else they would destroy LIRRs's third rail

     

    I didn't think you were talking about the shoe difference; the way you worded it seemed as if they couldn't handle the voltage.

  7. They = Kodak P&S & iPhone 4; both are 5 megapixels.

     

    Don't get caught up in the whole megapixel myth. It's not the megapixels that's important...it's the pixel density. Pixel density = megapixels per square millimeter. Ridiculously high pixel densities only degrade image quality.

     

    Imagine two devices; both have 5 megapixel sensors. Device #1 has a sensor of pixel density 5MP/mm². Now imagine device #2 has a sensor of PD 2.5MP/mm². Device #2 has a lower pixel density...less pixels per square millimeter. Ceteris paribus, device #2 will have better resolution than #1 and therefore judgmentally better image quality.

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