Horses for Courses
Posted: Sun Mar 09, 2014 5:54 pm
A couple of new horses hanging around the Stark ranch
The Workhorse. Freshly purchased, will be the primary camera on our New Orleans Jazzfest trip this year. Also taking in LA, DC, Raleigh, Miami and Key West.
The Show Pony. A review unit, courtesy of Nikon Australia. This is a very controversial camera, as you know.
I think that the knurled aluminium knobs on the lh side of the body - used for ISO and EV compensation - are a bit too thick; to me they look overdone and thus they're overly heavy (looking). As y'all know, it does not have video, and that was one of the factors in my D800e purchase. Along with the higher resolution that it offered. Also on the lh side, the end of the camera seems to be quite thick and is very squarely rendered. Most of these comments are merely cosmetic, of course, and have no bearing on how the camera works.
In the hand, this camera feels bloody awesome (both of them do) but the sound of the Df is .... OMFGGood. For those of us who do like the retro look, the sound is even better than how it looks.
The unit I got came with the new 50mm f/1.8G lens, and this lens is no slouch. I'll post a couple of images later, but it seems to on a similar plane as the 50mm f/1.4D that I have.
But using my legacy glass presented an issue. The G glass works fine, but where the D glass is supposed to work, I was seeing Feee messages with the 50mm f/1.4, the 80-400 VR, the 85mm f/14 and the 24mm f/2.8, all of which have the correct electronic contacts inside the lens mount. We were out for the day, and this was truly puzzling me.
I need to check on this, but in order to get the body to work with this glass, I needed to set the AI tab into place; the Df uses the mechanical coupling to set the aperture. I was stunned. I'm still undecided as to whether I think that this is a good thing, but in my heart of hearts, the concept of setting my aperture using the aperture ring on the lens is very appealing.
The Workhorse. Freshly purchased, will be the primary camera on our New Orleans Jazzfest trip this year. Also taking in LA, DC, Raleigh, Miami and Key West.
The Show Pony. A review unit, courtesy of Nikon Australia. This is a very controversial camera, as you know.
I think that the knurled aluminium knobs on the lh side of the body - used for ISO and EV compensation - are a bit too thick; to me they look overdone and thus they're overly heavy (looking). As y'all know, it does not have video, and that was one of the factors in my D800e purchase. Along with the higher resolution that it offered. Also on the lh side, the end of the camera seems to be quite thick and is very squarely rendered. Most of these comments are merely cosmetic, of course, and have no bearing on how the camera works.
In the hand, this camera feels bloody awesome (both of them do) but the sound of the Df is .... OMFGGood. For those of us who do like the retro look, the sound is even better than how it looks.
The unit I got came with the new 50mm f/1.8G lens, and this lens is no slouch. I'll post a couple of images later, but it seems to on a similar plane as the 50mm f/1.4D that I have.
But using my legacy glass presented an issue. The G glass works fine, but where the D glass is supposed to work, I was seeing Feee messages with the 50mm f/1.4, the 80-400 VR, the 85mm f/14 and the 24mm f/2.8, all of which have the correct electronic contacts inside the lens mount. We were out for the day, and this was truly puzzling me.
I need to check on this, but in order to get the body to work with this glass, I needed to set the AI tab into place; the Df uses the mechanical coupling to set the aperture. I was stunned. I'm still undecided as to whether I think that this is a good thing, but in my heart of hearts, the concept of setting my aperture using the aperture ring on the lens is very appealing.