GF-1: the flip side of the coin - some ugliness
Posted: Fri Dec 31, 2010 4:31 pm
the gf1 has been a much deseried and much talked about camera over the past year or so. highly praised by just about anyone ive ever spoken with or read about online. well; i caved in and made my PP on a gf1 with the 20mm kit. $599AUD to my door within 3 days from DWI which i was very pleased about. the camera itself ? not so pleased. mostly cos of poor research on my part and partly cos of what i think are fundamental flaws with the way the GF1 operates.
pros:
these have been done to death so i wont go into them. for subjects that dont move and you have "time" then the images you can pull out of it are fantastic. for people, ask them to "smile" and they stop moving, excellent. really very impressive quality in the RAW files which surprised me.
the 2 issues i have with it:
Issue 1:
AF-C will not work with the 20mm lens. let me repeat that for a second. the camera will NOT continuously AF at all. its in single focus mode ALL OF THE TIME, (unless you go MF). just in case the gravity of this is lost on you...for anything that moves, especially using a 1.7 lens, trying to nail a shot is so difficult and infuriating that the overwhelming feeling you have is to throw the fuckin thing in the river.
with a camera that functions normally, trying to shoot a rampant 3yo who is running around is difficult enough as it is; you half depress the shutter and track him till you see some decent shots and then fully depress to take the shot. this not possible with this camera. you have to keep half pressing the shutter which of course is not only annoying but not very effective. THIS is supposed to be a P&S ? my arse. for anything moving a POS is a more fitting acronym.
Issue 2:
auto iso is crippled by the fact that the minimum shutter speed cannot be adjusted at all. it works it out to be roughly 1/focal length apparently. so with the 20mm on, the min shutter speed i get is 1/30s which of course is freakin pointless without IS or with an object that has a pulse.
perhaps i'm just too used to a nikon dslr that just "works" but i must say for a camera in 2010 to be crippled by the above 2 issues is imo an epic fail.
at first i thought i could live with it and work around it, but fact is that i cant. it simply does not execute the most basic of functions that one would expect of a high end camera...AF properly. i do not recommend this camera at all to anyone unless all you do is shoot landscape. not sure what the status is for these issues with other m4/3rds cameras, but if they suffer the same issues then screw that m4/3 can jam it !
rant over....happy new year !!
pros:
these have been done to death so i wont go into them. for subjects that dont move and you have "time" then the images you can pull out of it are fantastic. for people, ask them to "smile" and they stop moving, excellent. really very impressive quality in the RAW files which surprised me.
the 2 issues i have with it:
Issue 1:
AF-C will not work with the 20mm lens. let me repeat that for a second. the camera will NOT continuously AF at all. its in single focus mode ALL OF THE TIME, (unless you go MF). just in case the gravity of this is lost on you...for anything that moves, especially using a 1.7 lens, trying to nail a shot is so difficult and infuriating that the overwhelming feeling you have is to throw the fuckin thing in the river.
with a camera that functions normally, trying to shoot a rampant 3yo who is running around is difficult enough as it is; you half depress the shutter and track him till you see some decent shots and then fully depress to take the shot. this not possible with this camera. you have to keep half pressing the shutter which of course is not only annoying but not very effective. THIS is supposed to be a P&S ? my arse. for anything moving a POS is a more fitting acronym.
Issue 2:
auto iso is crippled by the fact that the minimum shutter speed cannot be adjusted at all. it works it out to be roughly 1/focal length apparently. so with the 20mm on, the min shutter speed i get is 1/30s which of course is freakin pointless without IS or with an object that has a pulse.
perhaps i'm just too used to a nikon dslr that just "works" but i must say for a camera in 2010 to be crippled by the above 2 issues is imo an epic fail.
at first i thought i could live with it and work around it, but fact is that i cant. it simply does not execute the most basic of functions that one would expect of a high end camera...AF properly. i do not recommend this camera at all to anyone unless all you do is shoot landscape. not sure what the status is for these issues with other m4/3rds cameras, but if they suffer the same issues then screw that m4/3 can jam it !
rant over....happy new year !!