Roger Hicks
Veteran
I'd sure rather have that tank of a D3 and a long zoom when I'm photographing a charging bull elephant there in Africa.
Is this something you do often? Or indeed, at all?
Cheers,
R.
I'd sure rather have that tank of a D3 and a long zoom when I'm photographing a charging bull elephant there in Africa.
A PJ without a wide zoom and a long zoom lens is at a competitive disadvantage in breaking news situations. If things are happening fast, and you're the guy with a fixed 35mm on your camera, you lose. Especially if the guy 100 feet down the road has a gun.
He's also not going to cover a political figure from 100 feet away.
Trading in the DSLR doesn't sound like a good career move to me. Go figure.
I use mine mostly for publication so from what I have seen of them they will be more than good enough . . . for. .
Regards
P
Richard,
Firstly I'm told I wont get mine until Christmas so there's time yet but secondly if as I am told Leica has listened to those that use Leica's for what they designed for then I should have little worry having been a Leica user and for a long time. But I have Nikon Ds and Member of NPU as it is now for 35 years and also Canons F1s etc but not an EOS D yet although many of my collegues use them but are switching over to D3s when their time to change comes around
Regards
P
Say again, RAW is what photography it is all about ? !!!
There you go and I have thought for the last 35 years it was about producing an image.
My M9s when they get to me will provide more help to enable me to do that than half a ton of DSLR s and lenses lugged about through the bush in Africa and I am certain they will provide the right sort of images that my 2 D3s and D700 do now as I say without the weight and size which is so important . Did you see the size comparisons between the Canon 50 and 40mm Voigtlander not to mention the weight.
I can only think of one reason 'the bigger the better' although there are some who feel that the way its used is far more important.
When I was shooting with a couple of contax G2s on the Essex coast a couple of years ago two Gentlemen approached me with the usual Chunk Dslrs and long lenses sticking out of their guts and said "Wow thats a couple of 'oldies' you got there ", I replied " yes" as I couldn't be bothered to say anything to them and they both 'promenaded' along their way.
One even stopped a few yards away and heaved his DLSR up to his eye and zoomed his 100 to 400 zoom on a seagull which turned and flew away probably fed up with having its picture taken again. Meanwhile a dozen fire crew were saving the lives of two boys on the beach which both of these 'gentlemen' had ignored or more likely hadn't even seen. Maybe they didn't care and were just taking the dogs and the dslrs 'out for a walk' ...............
Say again, RAW is what photography it is all about ? !!!
There you go and I have thought for the last 35 years it was about producing an image.
My M9s when they get to me will provide more help to enable me to do that than half a ton of DSLR s and lenses lugged about through the bush in Africa and I am certain they will provide the right sort of images that my 2 D3s and D700 do now as I say without the weight and size which is so important . Did you see the size comparisons between the Canon 50 and 40mm Voigtlander not to mention the weight.
I can only think of one reason 'the bigger the better' although there are some who feel that the way its used is far more important.
When I was shooting with a couple of contax G2s on the Essex coast a couple of years ago two Gentlemen approached me with the usual Chunk Dslrs and long lenses sticking out of their guts and said "Wow thats a couple of 'oldies' you got there ", I replied " yes" as I couldn't be bothered to say anything to them and they both 'promenaded' along their way.
One even stopped a few yards away and heaved his DLSR up to his eye and zoomed his 100 to 400 zoom on a seagull which turned and flew away probably fed up with having its picture taken again. Meanwhile a dozen fire crew were saving the lives of two boys on the beach which both of these 'gentlemen' had ignored or more likely hadn't even seen. Maybe they didn't care and were just taking the dogs and the dslrs 'out for a walk' ...............
This reminds me of a conversation I had many years ago in a computer shop. One of the other customers was telling me that my computer was hopelessly outdated, and that I needed this, that and the other thing.
He was nonplussed when I asked why, and started blustering about games. I replied, "Ah, well, there's the difference. You need the extra power to play games. All I do with mine is earn a living."
Cheers,
R.
Well, I do, and I can assure you that you need anti-shake technology more than any lens for quite a while.Is this something you do often? Or indeed, at all?
Cheers,
R.
parsec1, I don't doubt what you are saying. But it obviously clearly doesn't apply to most PJ's. PJ's shot with crop sensor cameras for many years (especially if they shot Nikons). The fact is that, over a period of several years, Leica managed to sell fewer than 20,000 M8's. Most of those were sold into the Japanese market,
Didn't someone point out in a thread recently that Nikon have consistently sold more film F6's per year than Leica have managed to sell M8's per year since the M8 was released?
Makes you realise that the F6 still has a lot of 'chutzpa' in the market to outsell a digital ... albeit a rangefinder.
Horribly OT I know! 😛