macjim
Well-known
New review, yes I know it's another one but it's written by tony Bridge for the F11 magazine. Worth a read both the review and, the magazine. Download from here: http://www.f11magazine.com/site/current.html
A good photographer doesn't need AF tracking. A good photographer can make any camera work for him. The Hassleblads used on the moon by Apollo astronauts didn't even have a viewfinder. They were point and shoot, and the pictures are spectacular.
A good photographer doesn't need AF tracking. A good photographer can make any camera work for him. The Hassleblads used on the moon by Apollo astronauts didn't even have a viewfinder. They were point and shoot, and the pictures are spectacular.
Every new camera that comes out, starts getting criticized for some technical shortcoming by technogeeks. Usually about features that didn't even exist 10 years ago like Focus Peaking, or 30 years ago like Autofocus. And to think, there were wedding photographers back in the 20s, 40s, 50s, 70s, 80s.......
Oh, and "Thanks!" Macjim for bringing f11 to my attention. Had not seen it previously.
I agree that the only way to know for sure is to try it ourselves. Unfortunately I'll have to wait until I can travel to a city that has an actual camera store :bang:.
And finding a camera store that actually carries the Fuji stuff is even harder.
Agreed!!
... the AF tracking may be good enough and, as I've said time and time again, it may be "ME" that has the problem with how the camera is/was set up.
Cheers,
Dave
Agreed!! Larry - try out the camera for yourself; for what you want to use it for - the AF tracking may be good enough and, as I've said time and time again, it may be "ME" that has the problem with how the camera is/was set up. I just want another person to try it and to post the findings - reviews and camera store videos (who benefit from the sale of the camera itself) don't quite do it for me 🙂 Cheers, Dave
I haven't received mine yet, and I've never used AF tracking in my life, or expect to do so in the future, but just for the sake of conversation:
I understand these cameras need to use the pdaf pixels on the sensor for AF tracking to work. However in low light they revert to cdaf for some reason, so I would think AF tracking would not work? So far all successful AF-tracking tests I've seen have been in good light, so maybe that explains it?
Interesting... but no mention of the AF tracking - and then he goes and says it's for wedding photographers... what's the acronym the kids use these days? *SMH*
Cheers,
Dave