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somnambulist posted:So I just started a new photography job and they gave me a D4S... Try out the video in low light with autoISO
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 14:48 |
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# ? May 8, 2024 19:57 |
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So I've been thinking of getting my first DSLR camera, and had initially decided on the 5500. However it appears I can get the 5300 for 100-150 euros cheaper, and then get another 50 euro rebate directly from Nikon. As far as I know the cameras have the same sensor, image quality, etc, the older model is just lacking the touch screen and doesn't have as much battery life. So is there any reason to get the 5500?
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 23:05 |
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Ika posted:So I've been thinking of getting my first DSLR camera, and had initially decided on the 5500. However it appears I can get the 5300 for 100-150 euros cheaper, and then get another 50 euro rebate directly from Nikon. As far as I know the cameras have the same sensor, image quality, etc, the older model is just lacking the touch screen and doesn't have as much battery life. What is your budget? A used D7000 is going to be able to drive older lenses without motors in them and is more fully featured than a 5xxx. I imagine it's the same price or cheaper than a new 5xxx.
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 23:23 |
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Leperflesh posted:Macro questions
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 23:47 |
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Well, the D5500 + 18-55mm lens + 55-300mm lens is 1030 or so, which if I stretch it is just about my max. I would prefer staying significantly under that, so getting the 5300 + 18-55mm lens is 600 (-50euro ebay coupon, and -50 euro Nikon rebate makes it 500), and then the 300mm lens separately would be another 270 or so. The used 7100s I have seen have all been at least 650 euros for just the body, which would put me above 1000 with the two lenses. Ika fucked around with this message at 23:53 on Aug 5, 2015 |
# ? Aug 5, 2015 23:50 |
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VelociBacon posted:What is your budget? Yep. I am going to be upgrading to a 7000 from my 5100 soon, I think, because I am starting to collect older lenses and the 7000 is a lot more friendly with them than the 5100. Plus you get the magnesium alloy body, weather sealing, and pentaprism finder. Better AF, too, but the 5300/5500 probably have better AF than the 5100 by now also. They go for $500-600 used around here.
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# ? Aug 5, 2015 23:51 |
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Moon Potato posted:The Sigma is definitely the better lens in terms of optics (even the older of the two discussed is in the same ballpark as Nikon and Canon's best offerings), and will give you a little more working distance than the 85mm. Unless you really need image stabilization, I'd go with the Sigma. The exception to that is if the nature macro shots you're doing are in dimly-lit areas (under forest canopies, etc.). Shooting macro handheld with no VR/OS can be a bit much for an APS-C camera unless you have plenty of light to work with. Hmm. I tend to take macro nature photos while on hikes and stuff, and also around my house: sometimes it's in bright light, sometimes not. Having more capability is nice, but I have to decide how much that extra capability is worth to me. One factor is that I have an old camera and some lenses to send in to KEH for store credit. Once I get that stuff sent in, I'll know how much money they're crediting me and that will help me decide what I can afford.
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# ? Aug 6, 2015 00:01 |
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Back to my original question: Is there any reason to spend 150-200 euros for the D5500 instead of the D5300 in terms of picture quality / processing? E: In another review I just read that the sensor has the same specs but is somehow still redesigned and better. Ika fucked around with this message at 22:13 on Aug 6, 2015 |
# ? Aug 6, 2015 21:37 |
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Ika posted:Back to my original question: Is there any reason to spend 150-200 euros for the D5500 instead of the D5300 in terms of picture quality / processing? I can't think of any. From what I read about the 5500 it didn't seem to offer that much more than the 5300 in terms of features and has about the same image quality. If you already know you want to stay with a 5xxx model, the 5300 is probably the better value.
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# ? Aug 7, 2015 00:28 |
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The D5500 has a bigger buffer and less shutter lag, which is nice for fast action photography. Battery life is a bit better, too. Other than that, you're just trading the D5300's GPS for the D5500's touch screen, which really depends on your preference. The D5500 has a higher max ISO setting, but your photos will look like a goat's breakfast once you get into the high settings on either camera.
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# ? Aug 7, 2015 00:52 |
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People seem to like the touchscreen, but the lack of a built in GPS on my 7200 can be a pain. I'm using a gps tracker on my phone instead and using the logfile in Lightroom to avoid hanging extra things off my camera.
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# ? Aug 7, 2015 01:23 |
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EL BROMANCE posted:People seem to like the touchscreen, but the lack of a built in GPS on my 7200 can be a pain. I'm using a gps tracker on my phone instead and using the logfile in Lightroom to avoid hanging extra things off my camera. Is this for landscape stuff? What benefit are you getting out of the GPS? Not trying to be snarky, honestly wondering what people use it for.
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# ? Aug 7, 2015 01:31 |
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VelociBacon posted:Is this for landscape stuff? What benefit are you getting out of the GPS? Not trying to be snarky, honestly wondering what people use it for. I bought an external GPS for my D7200 (I can't recommend it because it's not a great design, but it does work) because of all my bird photography. If I'm traveling to areas I'm unfamiliar with, or if I take a photo of a rare bird, it's nice to be able to have proof of exactly where I was.
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# ? Aug 7, 2015 02:08 |
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Thanks for all the info. GPS I don't care about, but neither do I need a touchscreen, so that balances out.iammeandsoareyou posted:I can't think of any. From what I read about the 5500 it didn't seem to offer that much more than the 5300 in terms of features and has about the same image quality. If you already know you want to stay with a 5xxx model, the 5300 is probably the better value. Even the used 7100s / 7200s are significantly more than what a kit 5300 costs, and for my first camera I would prefer new anyhow, so I think I'm gonna stick with one of these.
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# ? Aug 7, 2015 08:31 |
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VelociBacon posted:Is this for landscape stuff? What benefit are you getting out of the GPS? Not trying to be snarky, honestly wondering what people use it for. I like to travel and shoot a lot, or for example I'm following a parade route tomorrow so I'd like it to track my movements. I don't use it for all shoots because it's an extra step and it's a pain, but if I'm not standing still it's nice to have a log of where exactly you were. Plus some online services support the tags which is useful, I wish 500px did because oh my god their map lookup thing is the worst.
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# ? Aug 7, 2015 10:07 |
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Hmm, I've got a D5100 and I think I'm fine with the picture quality etc etc but I kind of wish it had more video options, and also Wi-Fi would be nice because I suck at uploading my pictures to share anywhere. How can I get a good idea of what my D5100 is worth? It's only got a few thousand exposures on it and is in pretty good condition. Glanced at Ebay and people are selling them from $250-$750 so I don't even know where to start.
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# ? Aug 7, 2015 15:49 |
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FISHMANPET posted:Hmm, I've got a D5100 and I think I'm fine with the picture quality etc etc but I kind of wish it had more video options, and also Wi-Fi would be nice because I suck at uploading my pictures to share anywhere. How can I get a good idea of what my D5100 is worth? It's only got a few thousand exposures on it and is in pretty good condition. Glanced at Ebay and people are selling them from $250-$750 so I don't even know where to start. Generally for eBay, ignore listed prices and only look at completed auctions. Also check what KEH is asking for your camera in similar condition and assume you'll have to undercut them by a bit.
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# ? Aug 7, 2015 18:45 |
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Leperflesh posted:Generally for eBay, ignore listed prices and only look at
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# ? Aug 7, 2015 22:32 |
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Good news guys apparently live view will jam the df/d600 shutter stuck permanently. Just in time to order a backup Df. gently caress, now I have to sneak out during halftime to abuse the best buy return policy.
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# ? Aug 8, 2015 19:19 |
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This probably isn't the best place to ask, so I apologize for cluttering up the thread, but can someone let me know if they ever bought from tronix LTD (UK). They have several thousand feedback on ebay, seem to be officially listed in the UK, and the only thing making me slightly suspicious is I can't find them on any UK price comparison website. Other stores in the UK seem to occasionally offer similar prices, but they still are really cheap which makes me suspicious. Or maybe they drop ship from these tax free havens like play.co.uk does. E: vvvvv: Ya I was told it would make much more sense to get a 18-105 or 18-140 lens instead of the standard 18-55, and the price difference between the two kits at several stores I looked at is similar to the price difference of the lenses, its just that here in Germany all stores have the D5500 as 200+ euros more expensive than the D5300, and some UK stores have them for very similar prices. When shipping from outside the EU there is a substantial customs fee on anything above 50 euros. E2: vvvv Its good to know the price is comparably with reliable sites. Ika fucked around with this message at 20:48 on Aug 8, 2015 |
# ? Aug 8, 2015 19:38 |
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Ika posted:This probably isn't the best place to ask, so I apologize for cluttering up the thread, but can someone let me know if they ever bought from tronix LTD (UK). They have several thousand feedback on ebay, seem to be officially listed in the UK, and the only thing making me slightly suspicious is I can't find them on any UK price comparison website. If you look for really cheap you might as well have a look at http://www.digitalrev.com/product/nikon-d5500-kit-with-18/MTEwMzk2Nw_A_A. £439 for the kit, free shipping and 1 year warranty. I have ordered lenses and stuff from them before and never had any issues. They ship from Hong Kong I believe, but whatever. edit: crap, just noticed your link had the other kit lens and that'd be £539 at DR as well, so I guess it's kinda the same type of deal. Morkfang fucked around with this message at 20:34 on Aug 8, 2015 |
# ? Aug 8, 2015 20:30 |
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So I'm slowly learning how to use a Nikon properly (D4S) and some things are still driving me nuts and I'm hoping you guys have some tips. Changing ISO - it's on the bottom left hand corner and really hard to get to, am I missing something? On a Canon I get all my info in the viewfinder and if I know I can't get the shot with my shutter speed being too slow, with my right hand I can press the ISO button and quickly switch to something higher, while here I need to take the camera off my face and find the button tucked away at the bottom, press and HOLD the button and use a dial? Can you make it easier somehow or is that just how it is? If so, what's a good technique for getting to it quickly? Ergonomically I have an issue sliding my left hand to it while keeping my shot steady. Second thing is focusing- specifically auto focus. On a Canon 5d Mark 3 they have something called spot focusing (I forget if that's the actual name) but basically it targets SPECIFICALLY what's in the small square inside your focus point. I'm shooting in some dim courthouses, board rooms, conference rooms etc and the single point auto focus is struggling to focus sometimes. I have it set to back button auto focus and sometimes it doesn't even APPEAR to try to focus. It does nothing. Not even hunt. I'm hoping I just have a setting off or something, anyone have that issue? Lastly- I'm using the sb 910 which is pretty powerful but the menu system is kinda overwhelming. Aside from flash compensation is there anything useful you can recommend for using it in places explained above or is that the main thing? I'll probably use TTL most of the time, as some of these events are crazy fast paced.
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# ? Aug 8, 2015 20:53 |
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Caryna posted:If you look for really cheap you might as well have a look at http://www.digitalrev.com/product/nikon-d5500-kit-with-18/MTEwMzk2Nw_A_A. £439 for the kit, free shipping and 1 year warranty. I have ordered lenses and stuff from them before and never had any issues. They ship from Hong Kong I believe, but whatever. What seems to be going on is these are grey market imports, and that is why they can undercut everyone else who are selling cameras meant for the EU. This probably means any direct guarantee work with Nikon would be a hassle. Ika fucked around with this message at 21:35 on Aug 8, 2015 |
# ? Aug 8, 2015 21:12 |
somnambulist posted:So I'm slowly learning how to use a Nikon properly (D4S) and some things are still driving me nuts and I'm hoping you guys have some tips. However you should be able to adjust it without taking your eye from the viewfinder. From the manual: somnambulist posted:Second thing is focusing- specifically auto focus. On a Canon 5d Mark 3 they have something called spot focusing (I forget if that's the actual name) but basically it targets SPECIFICALLY what's in the small square inside your focus point. Don't know about the flash.
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# ? Aug 8, 2015 21:24 |
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ISO - I have 'Easy ISO' enabled in the menus, which does a few things - puts the ISO value in the viewfinder (not sure if that's there by default on the 4S but it's not on the crop models). It also changes the secondary dial in Aperture and Shutter priority modes into an ISO dial, so you can adjust it manually. In Manual it doesn't do anything. I have auto ISO enabled and use the exposure compensations to change the equation as needed. Understandably this isn't for everyone. Focus - something sounds wrong as I shoot BBF single point most of the time, and while I've experienced that issue it went away (either recoupling the lens or off/on from memory). Are you in Auto continuous focus? Have you disabled the shutter from autofocusing on the half press (which it needs to be told to do as otherwise both buttons will start the autofocus mechanism).
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# ? Aug 8, 2015 21:28 |
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Ika posted:This probably isn't the best place to ask, so I apologize for cluttering up the thread, but can someone let me know if they ever bought from tronix LTD (UK). They have several thousand feedback on ebay, seem to be officially listed in the UK, and the only thing making me slightly suspicious is I can't find them on any UK price comparison website.
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# ? Aug 8, 2015 21:40 |
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spookygonk posted:I bought my Nikon D7000 from a company like DigitalRev called [url=http://panamoz.com/[/url] and the service and price was second to none. Friend of mine also bought his D800E through them as well and again no problems with the order or customs . My workplace recently bought a Nikon D5300 + 18-140mm lens for stills and video. I did spec out the D5500, but there wasn't that much of an improvement (photo & video wise) over the D5300, so we didn't go with the D5500. The new prices seem to run a bit lower than KEH's used prices - seems pretty win/win if it's a bit cheaper and the warranty situation is the same. Or will Nikon do warranty transfers if you're buying used?
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# ? Aug 8, 2015 23:37 |
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I appreciate the quick replies. I guess auto ISO isn't a bad idea but does it work with TTL flash well? I'd hate to shoot at ISO 800 when I could have done it at 200 with proper flash settings. I guess it's a matter of playing with it and seeing what works best. I'll look into the auto focus, I haven't really figured out what auto focus modes do what yet. The manual isn't very helpful beyond basic explanations. Maybe I'll go to the library of YouTube.
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# ? Aug 8, 2015 23:48 |
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TTL flash adjusts the ISO to try bring the background detail out, so you should expect higher than expected/desired values. I hit my max of 6400 often. There are workarounds though, involving changing the command mode for it, but from memory there are some caveats. Best to look into it, it's been covered online in quite some detail at least.
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# ? Aug 8, 2015 23:59 |
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EL BROMANCE posted:TTL flash adjusts the ISO to try bring the background detail out, so you should expect higher than expected/desired values. I hit my max of 6400 often. There are workarounds though, involving changing the command mode for it, but from memory there are some caveats. Best to look into it, it's been covered online in quite some detail at least. Yeah you can do negative exposure compensation on the camera and cancel it out with positive exposure compensation on the flash iirc
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# ? Aug 9, 2015 01:17 |
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EL BROMANCE posted:TTL flash adjusts the ISO to try bring the background detail out, so you should expect higher than expected/desired values. I hit my max of 6400 often. There are workarounds though, involving changing the command mode for it, but from memory there are some caveats. Best to look into it, it's been covered online in quite some detail at least. That's nice , and much better than canon who locks auto ISO at 400 when you use a flash.
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# ? Aug 9, 2015 01:52 |
somnambulist posted:I'll look into the auto focus, I haven't really figured out what auto focus modes do what yet. The manual isn't very helpful beyond basic explanations. Maybe I'll go to the library of YouTube. Hold the AF setting button, use the front wheel ("sub-command dial") to adjust until it says "AF-S S" in the viewfinder. That's single-point AF in single-servo mode. You should then be able to use D-pad on the back to move the AF point around. The dot/L switch locks the focus point to prevent accidentally moving it with your nose or something.
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# ? Aug 9, 2015 15:48 |
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Can someone explain the use for 51 AF points? I feel like 11 points would be easier to manage for very fast action, but I'd love to know the use case for more.
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# ? Aug 9, 2015 18:11 |
Isn't it mostly for the 3D motion tracking to use? I also think it sounds excessive for a user interface. It's fine to have them if it makes tracking more accurate, but the number of selectable points for locking on should probably be smaller, to be easier to manage.
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# ? Aug 9, 2015 18:19 |
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somnambulist posted:Can someone explain the use for 51 AF points? I feel like 11 points would be easier to manage for very fast action, but I'd love to know the use case for more. 3D tracking in AF-C, basically, as well as auto-area and group-area AF. If this is still confusing, you really ought to go read Nikon's page that breaks down the modes: http://nps.nikonimaging.com/technical_solutions/d4s_tips/basic_settings/
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# ? Aug 9, 2015 19:39 |
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somnambulist posted:Can someone explain the use for 51 AF points? I feel like 11 points would be easier to manage for very fast action, but I'd love to know the use case for more. Yeah I need to learn to use the 3D tracking and other modes as suggested by the poster above because single point can be a nightmare when you're in fast situations and are switching between portrait and landscape.
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# ? Aug 9, 2015 21:50 |
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I just upgraded from a 5100 to a 7000 (technically the 7000 came out the year before, but I am only losing a couple pointless features like HDR and a flip out screen) What luxury! Tungsten body, pentaprism finder, weather sealing, 39 AF points vs 11, autofocus screw, metering with ai lenses, dual sd cards, the list goes on. Makes me wonder why I went with the 5100 from the start.
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# ? Aug 18, 2015 06:29 |
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BANME.sh posted:I just upgraded from a 5100 to a 7000 (technically the 7000 came out the year before, but I am only losing a couple pointless features like HDR and a flip out screen) yeah the 5X00 models are stupid unless you really have to have a flippy screen
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# ? Aug 18, 2015 14:57 |
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BANME.sh posted:Tungsten body, This would bring a whole new meaning to the DSLR/Mirrorless weight wars
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# ? Aug 18, 2015 15:17 |
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# ? May 8, 2024 19:57 |
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Lol I meant magnesium
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# ? Aug 18, 2015 15:56 |