35photo
Well-known
But it is still expensive, which seems to go against the thread.
Haven’t looked at prices of em
But it is still expensive, which seems to go against the thread.
With your K1 and D3, I see nothing attractive about D800’s, Canons, or even any newer DSLR. The K1 is very nice.
Don’t these work well with your D3? D700 is a possibility, as they’re inexpensive now, but D3 is everything a D700 is and more. Df would let you use inexpensive non-AI lenses if you have them and would offer a more traditional experience with its discrete controls, but the Df retains a high price even today.…The missing piece of the equation is that I have used Nikons since 1994 or so and have many, many of their AIS lenses and a handful of D series autofocus ones. ..
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It is certainly possible that the older Nikon lenses wouldn't hold up on the D800. Some of the older K-mount lenses that I loved on my LX (100/2.8) have never worked well on the K-1.
The RX0 is too square for the pocket IMO.
Maybe not jeans pocket, but my RX0 is in my jacket pocket every single day that I'm out. It's simply the best pocket camera for me.
I just wonder what you think your current cameras aren't giving you that makes you curious about getting something else.
That's a fair question, and the answer is really "nothing" -- in the sense that I haven't put my existing cameras to anything like full use since Covid hit. Having said that, I do suffer a fair bit from retroactive GAS, where past lust for a particular piece of gear surfaces years later after the actual need has passed. I backed into a complete Mamiya RB system a couple of years ago for exactly that reason. I had always wanted one when I was using my Pentax 67 in the 90's. There is nothing rational about it, except that over time used gear does generally trend down in price to the point where it hits "fun budget" as opposed to "house payment." In fact, there has probably never been a better time to be a gearhead as there is tons of used pro gear from the film era with life left in it and living repair people available but also digital cameras that really are light years ahead technically of where the comparably sized film equipment was.
Generally these days, I buy lenses not bodies as the former can always be attached to some new platform and the latter have been "good enough" for a while. But every five to seven years or so, something comes along which does offer new technical capabilities, and when that stuff goes down in price on the used market, it is worth it (to me) to ask the question. And by the way, a big "thank you" to all those who responded.
So, yes, the D3 is a fabulous camera, but I use it less since the K1 joined the family gear stable. And if a D800 were to fall into my lap at a reasonable price, the fact that it is surplus to actual requirements wouldn't matter to me at all. It would be like saying "yes" to seeing Star Wars on family movie night, even though I have seen it so many times that I don't actually need to ever see it again. So, yeah. Han shot first, and a D800 for under $500 would be tempting.
X-H1 is not bad price https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=fujifilm+x-h1&_sop=12&LH_Sold=1&rt=nc But it just a cropper. You could get 6D with better high ISO, much wider and less expensive lenses selection.
For less. https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=canon+eos+6d&_sop=13&LH_Sold=1&rt=nc
You could... but that cropper's high ISO is actually comparable not worse and you get 5 stops of IBIS to help out with non moving subjects.
X-H1 was ditched by Fuji in record short period and is ditched now by users for reasons.
I wondered about that. What was the complaint? I thought the in body stabilization was what got folks all excited about these cameras.