jamriman
Established
I would never do it, since having both is great BUT that M8 excitement is now gone even with the shutter and frameline upgrade. How many of you decided to wipe the dust off their M8's and sell it? Thanks
I bought my M8 new in April of '07 when it was still like $4700 or so. It has served me well professionally and allowed me to keep my visual style while using a digital workflow which is essential these days. I'll be sending it off for upgrade once leica gets back to me. Mine has a few rub marks, some scratches. Its been well used. And I'll probably continue to mistreat it for a few years to come until the M9 shows up.
R-D1 has a big minus, over the M8, which is the 1.5x crop factor.
Which lens makes an aprox 35mm super bright lens? big problem
The 1.5x crop factor is a big plus to me, in fact one of the reasons why i don't like the M8 at all. My beloved 50mm are useless with the M8. Either too long or too short. Make marvelous 75mm on the R-D1.R-D1 has a big minus, over the M8, which is the 1.5x crop factor. Which lens makes an aprox 35mm super bright lens?...
I have both and I am now using the R-D1 because of shutter problems on the M8. My thoughts in two words :
R-D1 :
- better ergonomics
- more fun
- great high ISO look
- flippable LCD
- 1:1 finder
M8 :
- superior IQ (160 and 320)
- amazing build quality
- 1/4000th and 1/8000th
- better LCD and interface.
- wider span of framelines (FF 32mm to 120mm vs 43mm to 75mm on R-D1)
So really, for me it is not one or the other, both have their pros and cons. The only real limitation is sensor size if you do large prints (A3 barely ok with R-D1) or are obsessed with resolution.
Once 4/3 gets it's teeth into the market it won't matter which digital rangefinder you have ... they'll both be worth less than 'not much' second hand. A year or so from now I'd expect to be able to buy a well used M8 for $1500 and an RD-1 for a lot less.
Once 4/3 gets it's teeth into the market it won't matter which digital rangefinder you have ... they'll both be worth less than 'not much' second hand. A year or so from now I'd expect to be able to buy a well used M8 for $1500 and an RD-1 for a lot less.
Mani, congratulations! This is the wisest choice. You will enjoy. With the current pricing I would have bought new, but 6 months ago it made sense to buy used.
Do you mind if I say this is a totally retarded comment?
1. I don't actually care what the secondhand value of the cameras are going to be in a year's time. I can afford to buy it now, want to use it for the foreseeable future, and when I'm tired of it will probably just put it away on a shelf and buy something else.
2. While the images from 4/3s are good, the dynamic range and dof effects will never match larger sensor cameras.
3. If you think 4/3 is so good, buy a G1 now - why would you want an 'inferior' M8 or RD1 in a year's time when you think they'll be virtually worthless.
4. Did I mention I thought your comment was retarded?
5. Oh and I forgot - have you actually held an M8 or an RD1 in your hand, and physically compared it to a G1? Or looked through a viewfinder vs an EVF for that matter?
There is a bit of contradiction here as you announce the 4/3rd micro as the M8 killer but at the same time you expect the micro to migrate to a bigger sensor. This would increase size of the G1 and get it to the same technological problems as the M8 (light fall-off with M lenses) which needs a lot of R&D thus higher costs.I own an M8 and like it very much ... but don't expect the current crop factor of the G1 for example to remain where it is. A lot of people will buy these things for a decent digital body to use their M mount lenses on as thay have done with the M8 and RD-1. When the sensor size becomes more realistic they will leave the digital rangefinders in their wake.