Benjamin Marks
Veteran
I was wasting some quality time on dpreview.com this morning and using their "studio shot comparison" tool to compare the new Pentax K5II to the M9, the Nikon D3 and the Fuji XP-1. At their base ISOs all of these cameras resolve the cross-hatching in the engravings that are part of the studio scene. For laughs I threw in the D800E as well. I am not focused on the test methodology. Subjectively, I would rank the new Pentax on a par with the Nikon D3, next clearest were the M9 and then the Fuji and D800E. These last seemed about equal in resolution, but the D800E image was larger. Caveats about the quality of on-screen jpgs must apply, because I am not sure that my screen is capable of revealing resolution differences at the size files that DPReview can post on its web site.
My own impression as an owner of a D3, an XP-1 and an M9 is that there is no need for me to upgrade at this time (or perhaps ever) == this is based on an assessment that even the lowest resolving camera among these is capable of providing an on-screen jpg that has gobs of resolution and micro contrast.
So how about it? If you could buy a camera that doubled your current camera's resolution for $3,000 would you do it? Could you use that extra resolving power for anything practical?
FWIW, this morning I am spotting a scan from a Tri-X negative from 1985 taken with a Pentax K1000 and a 100/2.8 lens and developed in Sprint chemistry. I can discern eyebrow hairs in the scan; with the D3 -- now apparently my lowest resolution camera -- I would be able to count those hairs, not just discern them.
Thoughts?
My own impression as an owner of a D3, an XP-1 and an M9 is that there is no need for me to upgrade at this time (or perhaps ever) == this is based on an assessment that even the lowest resolving camera among these is capable of providing an on-screen jpg that has gobs of resolution and micro contrast.
So how about it? If you could buy a camera that doubled your current camera's resolution for $3,000 would you do it? Could you use that extra resolving power for anything practical?
FWIW, this morning I am spotting a scan from a Tri-X negative from 1985 taken with a Pentax K1000 and a 100/2.8 lens and developed in Sprint chemistry. I can discern eyebrow hairs in the scan; with the D3 -- now apparently my lowest resolution camera -- I would be able to count those hairs, not just discern them.
Thoughts?