Camera recommendation

Beastlover

When leaving a room, make it dramatic...use Jazz h
Joined
Feb 19, 2002
Messages
3,333
So, my sister is going to Alaska for 2 weeks. The whole tour. She wants to get a digital camera, above average quality. She has heard the digitals also have models where you can change out the lens, blah, blah, blah. I know nothing, but immediately thought of you all here to give some sound advice for her to look at.

Let me have it. I can take it. :thumbsup2
 
definitely you'll need a dSLR.

If your budget is low, get a Pentax ist*DL. The camera is NOT low end by any means.
If your budget is higher, get either Nikon D50 or RebelXT.
If your budget rather high, get either Canon 30D or Nikon D200
if your budget is killer high, then get what Sonno posted: Canon 1Ds mkII.
 
:tigger: He is just too cute...shameless bump....
 

Just an addition. I personally am leery in buying a dSLR 2 weeks before a trip/assignment. It doesn't give me enough time to really get aquainted with the camera.

The only tip I can give you (after you bought your dSLR), practice, practice, practice and bring the user's manual with you. I still bring mine wherever I go just in case.
 
Beastlover said:
So, my sister is going to Alaska for 2 weeks. The whole tour. She wants to get a digital camera, above average quality. She has heard the digitals also have models where you can change out the lens, blah, blah, blah. I know nothing, but immediately thought of you all here to give some sound advice for her to look at.

Let me have it. I can take it. :thumbsup2

I had to interject...

Getting a DSLR is great for the RIGHT REASONS. And it can be totally inappropriate if obtained for the wrong ones. There is huge merit in considering a good "all-in-one" pocket digi-cam. Weight and size for one thing. If you had a pricey, bulky and comparatively heavy DSLR, one spare lense to have the benefit of your favorite lense perspectives/performance capabilities at your hip - and the bulk and weight of the bag to carry and protect it all, plus possibly a flash unit, spare battery and negligible weight/bulk of spare memory card(s).... I think it might be a very surprising burdon for someone posing curiosity for a DSLR and asking for a digicam recommendation.

With this in mind... from what I can gather the final user is asking "what are those cameras that swap lenses?" .... and as such is unfamiliar with a DSLR. Saddling such a user with a 5-10 pound bag, and powerful DSLR that is less than likely to be exploited anywheree near its' limits. This sort of original query is asking what is a practical travel camera for someone who may not have ever shot with an SLR, and who has yet to vier her first image on a screen and mused what can and should be adjusted to optimize the image!

I started out borrowing a $400 1.25 megapixel point and shoot 6 years ago. I had a grand time shooting 800 images over a 10 day Tahitian cruise - downloading for the 1st time ever ON THE SHIP. A fine time to learn, eh? But I am a little different. I am just barely comofrtable with PCs & Macs, and maybe even savvy with a few applications (then). Plus I had a few years experience with an SLR from 20-25 years ago when I took a high school photograpghy course and found a pleasurable hobby.

My 1st digicam was a G-1 I purchased when it was freshly introduced - and I dropped $1500 on the camera, batteries, a $500 microdrive, flash and soft nose bag to handle the canon wide adaptor I added. Yeah - I went from zero digital (had a Canon Sureshot as my regular fun carry camera - not an SLR!)... to a borrowed digicam... immediately to a $1500 pocket digicam kit!. My friends were mildly shocked... sionce I was usually a "bottom fisher" who always bought high tech items when they were 2nd or 3rd generation to save moola. Well, they neglected to recognize I was expecting our first child in a few months so I anticipated taking 100s of photos. Now I've taken 20s of thousands of images and dozens of MPEG video clips.

Returning to the subject at hand (forgive the tangetly wanderings)... I would say the profile here is for the ideal digicam that is well above average as we see it (that is ... as the DIS digi-photography sees it!). Not to chastise the DSLR enthusiasts here who posted - myself being counted as a total DSLR fan as well. But we are looking for the latest and greatest "HOT recommendation" for what is ideal for a travel camera to Alaska - for someone who is probably unfamiliar with what an SLR is.

I would generally say - in the most elegantly simplistic sense - buy from COstco for the easy unlimited duration return policy and stick with a Canon branded full size pocket digicam. Resist the temptation to get the smallest, slimmist digicam as there ARE compromises with those cameras. AND - get a friend who is an experienced photograp[hy ebthusiast to coach your sister/girlfriend on #1) basic operation, #2) basic traps and errors to avoid, #3) basic composition and artistic hallmarks to look for while framing images. An hour and you could improve your photo journal immeasurably.

I'll even toss in a few basic tips - 1) carry spare batteries. 2) Shoot no lower than 3MP if you want to have usable images. 2) brace against something solid when shooting in low light. Take a 2nd or 3rd shot if the moment is truly memorable. One may turn out horrible whule the other saves the moment for ever! Avoid moisture - it can destroy your camera. Pack a light computer for downloading and viewing your images on the trip. There's nothing like looking at glorious 14" sized tack sharp images of where you were just a few hours before. Plus there's nothing like looking at the images you just flubbed up to teach you what to change to improve for the next days' images! AND LAST - when you start manipulating your images DO NOT FORGET that every time you save a JPEG image it corrupts and distorts it slightly as it compresses it for storage. Reopen and resave an image several times and it begins to MELT AWAY. So a truly precious image that is being worked on should have ONE COPY undisturbed - and a 2nd or 3rd working copy. That way you will have something to work with years from now when you are really good at manipulating images (or you get a friend to process them for you!).

These are by no means everything important to know - but it's what I came up with "on the fly"... and now I gotta "jet"....

Hope this helped! :thumbsup2

i43EF8091-C9EB-4A14-818A-9A36F27AC09A.jpg
 
Exactly...she has experience in photography...college photo classes. She once had a regular 35 mm with the fancy lens and all...but since digital came out, she kind of lost it. She has a point and shoot digital, (Olympus) but was looking to get a better one for this and future trips. They are leaving the last week of July, so she will have some time to get accquainted with it.

I think she is looking in the $800-$1,000 range...maybe even more, if something really strikes her. If not recommending an actual camera, maybe just some pointers on what to look for so when she goes to buy,she has some knowledge....

Great thoughts, I really appreciate it...I have given her the link, and she is following along with the conversation, so say "hi" to her!! :thumbsup2
 
Beastlover said:
Exactly...she has experience in photography...college photo classes. She once had a regular 35 mm with the fancy lens and all...but since digital came out, she kind of lost it. She has a point and shoot digital, (Olympus) but was looking to get a better one for this and future trips. They are leaving the last week of July, so she will have some time to get accquainted with it.

I think she is looking in the $800-$1,000 range...maybe even more, if something really strikes her. If not recommending an actual camera, maybe just some pointers on what to look for so when she goes to buy,she has some knowledge....

Great thoughts, I really appreciate it...I have given her the link, and she is following along with the conversation, so say "hi" to her!! :thumbsup2

I'm still here ...

... quick reply... get a 350XT. If possible - nix the 18-55 kit lense unless she LOVES wide angle (then the 18-55 kit lense is very good for the money - but an all plastic job). I like the 28-105 f3.5-4.5 (!!! NOT THE newer f4.0-5.6!!! The older f3.5-4.5 was fated an 8.6 by the photo community on Fred-Miranda while the f4-5.6 was rated a 5!!! WHich is quite low. The f4-5.6 might as well have been a Coke bottle with that sort of rating!) as a cheap but well reviewed lense. Also - the 20-35 non L canon lense gets good review but is "affordable". I think you could do a 350XT KIT plus a 28-105 for about 1K. The lense from B&H photo is about $230. Get protective UV filters for the lenses and you're good. Oh -spare battery and shoulder bag.

ANd if you HAVE to consdier Nikon ... the cheaper D50 is cleaner at high ISO then the D70s. I WAS a Nikon snob - but Canon has 60% of DSLR market share for a reason ... their glass is superior!

Now I really gotts jet...

please excuse the typo errors - I have no time to edit!

iE1559273-6F2D-4C07-A2C0-FDCD63FE5DE2.jpg

4-5 years ago with my trusty old G-1 taken with the help of friends from Canada on the Disney cruise with us.
 
Beastlover said:
Exactly...she has experience in photography...college photo classes. She once had a regular 35 mm with the fancy lens and all...but since digital came out, she kind of lost it. She has a point and shoot digital, (Olympus) but was looking to get a better one for this and future trips. They are leaving the last week of July, so she will have some time to get accquainted with it.

I think she is looking in the $800-$1,000 range...maybe even more, if something really strikes her. If not recommending an actual camera, maybe just some pointers on what to look for so when she goes to buy,she has some knowledge....

Great thoughts, I really appreciate it...I have given her the link, and she is following along with the conversation, so say "hi" to her!! :thumbsup2

Okay if she has experience with the fancy cameras with changable lenses, then she would probably be able to handle a modern digital of that same type (which are called SLR cameras, by the way, and the digitals of that type are called digital SLRs or jusr DSLRs).

Without going into a long-winded explanation, let me just make a recomendation: Canon Digital Rebel XT (click here.) Many people on this board have the Rebel XT, and are thrilled with it's quality and ease of use.

The Rebel XT is available from a wide variety of camera shops, online vendors, and local electronics shops, including places like Circuit City, Best Buy, and Ritz Camera (you will find better prices online, however - try Amazon.com first). Expect to pay around $700-$800 (plus there is a $100 rebate currently available) for this camera, which includes the battery, charger, and a lens. It has a built-in flash. It does not include Compact Flash cards; you will have to buy at least one, and I recommend several.

The Rebel XT comes with a nice lens that goes from 18mm (wide angle) to 55mm (medium zoom). This lens is often called the "kit lens" because it's included in many Canon camera kits. She wil need the wide angles in Alaska!

However, she will also need a zoom lens in Alaska! She can spend all kinds of money on zoom lenses, but her budget will probably restrict her to only one for the time being.

My preference is a brand called Sigma (which makes lenses for many camera brands, including Canon). Sigma makes very good lenses that are cheaper than the Canon brand but still deliver terrific picture quality. My own Sigma lens is the 18-125, which goes from 18mm (wide angle) to 125mm (about 7x zoom). It costs about $230-$250 online; I got mine from Tri-State Camera, but it's sold by a variety of vendors (again, try Amazon.com first, but also shop around for better prices - just check here to see if it's a reputable company before you buy!)
 
Beastlover said:
Exactly...she has experience in photography...college photo classes. She once had a regular 35 mm with the fancy lens and all...but since digital came out, she kind of lost it. She has a point and shoot digital, (Olympus) but was looking to get a better one for this and future trips. They are leaving the last week of July, so she will have some time to get accquainted with it.

I think she is looking in the $800-$1,000 range...maybe even more, if something really strikes her. If not recommending an actual camera, maybe just some pointers on what to look for so when she goes to buy,she has some knowledge....

Great thoughts, I really appreciate it...I have given her the link, and she is following along with the conversation, so say "hi" to her!! :thumbsup2

Ok then... get this one:
http://www.usa.canon.com/consumer/controller?act=ModelDetailAct&fcategoryid=139&modelid=11154

And this lens:
http://www.sigmaphoto.com/lenses/lenses_all_details.asp?id=3287&navigator=6

:thumbsup2
 
I second what Sonno said. Get Rebel XT body only + Sigma 18-125. The total will be about $1k and she'll be able to take shots good enough for pro apps.
 
Why not the D50 and the Nikkor 18-200. The lens gives you VR and a longer reach. Granted it will run a bit more money, but its something to look at.

D50, body only runs a little over $500. The 18-200mm lens though runs about $750. If you can't afford or find the Nikkor 18-200 then the sigma 18-125 is the next best option. So for a little under $800 you can get the Nikon D50 and the Sigma 18-125. Don't forget about media cards. Minimum of 2 1 gig cards at about $35-40 each and a spare battery for about $40-50.

You really can't go wrong with either the Nikon D50 or the Canon, but someone had to speak up for us Nikon users. :cool1: :thumbsup2
 
B&H Photo is a wonderful photography store in NYC. However, they also have a great online service. I just bought my Rebel XT there earlier this week. I shopped around all of the stores and online vendors, including Costco and no one could beat B&H. You may find something cheaper online, but whenever I found one of the cheaper prices they didn't include the lens or was missing something. B&H is reputable and ships what it quotes. You won't have to worry about being ripped off from them.

The sigma lens that Sonno was talking about was going for $279 from B&H and $400 from Sigma's site just to give you an idea.

Best of luck!

BTW, she will love Alaska. I spent 4 months in a tent up there one summer in college doing geology research. It truly is a paradise up there.
 
I just checked B&H - they want $775 for the 350XT with 18-55 in black or silver for the body. $685 for body alone. http://www.bhphotovideo. And it just so happens I was at Costco earlier today and the price there was $799 for kit in only silver evidently. Although you will pay $25 more plus tax at Costco - I would say it's well worth it to have their liberal refund policy - near unlimited duration if you keep your receipt and do it politely. IE, it is not a 30 or 60 day thing - it is unlimited. I returned a $2500 HD TV after 16 months because it had been on the blink since it was 6 months old. It took me several months to diagnose it - then decide to return it - then select a replacement HDTV. No hassels - I had a receipt - and they were 1st rate about taking care of my return.

Normally at 6 months I would have been tatooed with the bad HDTV and out 2500 - yeah I would have been ticked off. But in this case I was extremely happy with the recourse afforded me.

As for lense - the reviews on these lense are listed here - http://www.photozone.de/8Reviews/lenses/sigma_18125_3556/index.htm

lens.jpg


And the summary "verdict" of the review states:

photoZONE said:
Verdict
The Sigma AF 18-125mm f/3.5-5.6 DC is naturally a compromise but the package is a bit more sound compared to its more ambitious sister lens - the AF 18-200mm f/3.5-6.3 DC. Sigma seems to have followed a quite interesting design approach - ignoring distortions and focus on the rest and this works out pretty well. The lens is very sharp specifically around the wide end of the zoom range but the tele settings aren´t bad either. CAs are about average and vignetting could be a little better at wide-open aperture. Nonetheless these are acceptable compromises for an extremely compact 7x zoom. Unfortunately the AF performance of the lens isn't quite as promising. On the EOS 350D AF accuracy is totally unacceptable when using a focal length below 50mm - I haven't really experienced another lens (besides the 18-200mm) which performs as bad in this respect. Trusting the camera is no good idea here. I used the lens extensively during a recent vacation and after a couple of days I gave up and disabled AF for wide angle shots (Note: normally I'm using the central AF point only for better accuracy ...).

As such - I must echo my experience with a non-Canon zoom I tried a few months ago. Admittedly, it was not a Sigma - it was a Tamaron 18-200. And this lense also had a strange habit of completly missing the focus. I was totally perplexed over the higher than normal (compared to Canon lenses) failure - as I became very careful and alert to focusing performance and technique on my part. Later - I researched the photo forums and found many others who complained of the same problem with non-Canon lenses. No one had a reliable or quantifiable explanation. However, what seemed to make some sense was that these non-Canon lenses had to be reverse engineered to operate as a Canon lense. I've seen articles where (naturally) Canon execs explain that they do not share the operating specifications for lenses so 3rd party makers can compete. So Sigma, Tamron and everyone else has to make educated guesses at how to design the interface. You would think it should be elementary - but then - it does not seem to work right for everyone. Another thing I saw was how some folks had to send their Sigma or Tamrons back to the manufacturer to get new IC programming - as the missed focus problems were extremem for these users.

Exceptions are bound to exist.... good and bad. I had a bad expoerience and am interested in mostly Canon made lenses - in spite of the extra expense. No doubt about it - Sigma and Tamron make SUPER lenses that do not exit in the Canon line up. Having an 18-125 or the even more radical 18-200 is not available from Canon. But - for me - it has to work properly in order to be really competitive.

You know - if you're going to do a special trip to Alaska - or if you're taking pictures of ANYTHING that is special - then you owe it to yourself to get the best and most reoliable you can comfortably afford. You can get the inexopensive kit lense covering 18-55. And add the lenses I was talking about - the 28-105 f3.5-4.5 at $230 from B&H. Unfortunately - with this combination you have an overlap in focal ranges from 28-55. I suspect you might end up using the better 28-105 most of the time. It's effective converted range is about 45mm to 168mm (the size of the DSLR sensor is undersized causing all lenses to behave with a 1.6x conversion against their full frame design focal length. IE... a 100mm lense behaves like a 160mm lense. SO - as I was saying - even with the overlap = and in effect the KIT lense extends your coverage down to 18mm - or a converted effective focal length of 28.8mm... you will need it. As having a 28-105 is like having a normal perspective view extending through mild telephoto of 3 power. The 18-55 gives you a 28.8 through 87.5mm... which is just shy of a 3x zoom range - and acually covers a nice range - if not an unaccepably limited range.

You know you can argue this til the cows come home. Any way you slice it - you're gonna have lots of great memories to show for your trip with a decent camera and possibly a backup plan. IE - carrry in your bag spare batteries, an extra memory card, and possibly a cheapie 2nd camera in case the primary fails. Or be ready to buy something on the road if the primary fails. I always have a backup camera - and extra batteries and memory.

AND - please ensure you do not buy the 28-105 f4-5.6 lense at $120... it is a Coke bottle lense and gets horrible test reviews. Get the 28-105 f3.5-4.5 for $230.

206434.jpg


And - alternatively ... for a super value in a long zoom lense ... get what I have for tele-zoom - a Canon 70-300 f4-5.6 Image Stabilized zoom. the effective converted focal range is 112-480mm. Plus the image stibilization design is stated as 3rd generation - it just came out late last year. The optics are superb - but the construction are comsumer grade - as opposed to the heavier professional grade designs. But at $534$ with a $25 rebate applied - it is a lot of glass for the money. Not the lightest, nor the smallest - but it quaifies as the most powerful Canon zoom of its' type for the money. The alternative to this is the white barreled 70-200 f4 "L" zoom. A true professional grade zoom supposedly. It does not possess the image stabilization mechanism - nor does it reach out to 300mm... but it is weather sealed and is considered very very well by most enthusiasts. This "L" zoom is actually quite affordable at $544 after a $40 rebate is applied.

397663.jpg
183198.jpg


Yeah....

Buying a 350XT with 18-55 kit lense is $799 from Costco ... less $100 for the rebate = $700. Adding a 28-105 makes it $930. Add $150 for 2 spare batteries, good 2nd tier UV filters and a 1 gig CF card or two off eBay and you're all done at $1080. Substitute a 70-300 IS f4-5.6 zoom like mine and you'll be in it for about $1385. Add another $10 and you can have the 70-200 f4 "L" pro lense. Or drop down to a B&H bought 350XT body alone at $685 with a sigma 18-125 for $280, plus $125 for filter, batteries and memory and you're sitting at $990 after adjustment for $100 rebate. One lense in that Sigma setup there versus 2 with the Canon lens proposals I made - plus buying the body from B&H offers you a black body whereas Costco seems to not have black bodies available. I happen to prefer black over silver. But then - the Costco purchase of the DSLR KIT allows for the extraordinary refund option. However - You'll add tax and shipping if applicable for ALL of my examples above.

I feel like a camera sales person all of a suddden. But believe it or not - it was entertaining to examine all this. Only a propeller head like me could admit that! :lmao:

So - good luck no matter how you go at this! Please forgive me for my obvious bias in this matter! :confused3

Remember - Canon has 60% of world wide DSLR market share. All the other competitors combined do not match Canon's dominance. And that is because of their technical superiority in camera bodies and lens designs. Why go non-Canon for the glass if you don't have to? However, if you have to - then the 3rd parties make lenses that Canon simply does NOT make! They have unique merit as well.
 
CaptainCrash,

although I've heard quite a number of people complaining about the inaccuracies of Sigma 18-125 (and worse, 18-200), other than I find that the AF is a tad slow, I've never experienced the inaccurate AF. I've used this lens on Rebel, RebelXT, 20D and 30D.

You've seen my pictures I posted here. Mostly were taken using Sigma 18-125 and although they are not tack sharp as Canon lenses, none of the Canon lens offers 18-125 let alone 18-200 (I'm waiting for the announcement for Canon's answer to Nikon's 18-200 VR -- supposedly -- any day now)
 
Yeah -

- I kno Kelly. That's why the 1st zoom I ought after I discovered the bad reviews on the old 28-200 Canon zoom was the Tamron 18-200. I did have a problem - a huge one - and I resold the Tamron in short order. I must say - when the Tamron was in focus it was TACK SHARP with decent contrast. Color was ... shall we say ... slightly different. But that is to be expected being a different manufacturer with different multicoating formulations.

BTW - I went with the Tamron because I was enamored with the 6 year warrenty, huge focal range, tolerable speed (except f6.3!) and metal mount versus the sigmas. The Sigmas do have plastic mounts - right? Or am I mistaken??

I admit to being biased given my personal experiences. I did post above that the zoom ranges for the Sigma and Tamrons at 18-125 or 18-200 were non-existant among Canon made lenses. So much for the fabled Canon technical innovation (with no competitive reply to these Sigmas and Tamrons). I would really lust after a good performing Canon 18- XXX OR 18-2XX+ lense .... that I could comfortably budget. If I reasoned through spending $10,000 for an "L" glass kit - consisting of primes and IS zooms then I would do it. However, I've already spent $4500+ on digicam toys these past few years. So - as I stated elsewhere - I'm side-stepping a generation on the bodies with the 10D and hunting after a lense KIT I can live with. Frankly - right now I'm right in the middle of considering SELLING my 70-300 and moving up to a 70-200 f2.8 IS "L" lense. Yeah - the jump is considerable in cost - but I am enamored with just the LOOK of the lense. I'm almost waxing emotionally now... sigh.

Oh well.... I'm still confused over the need for a fast portrait prime lense. I was thinking of obtaining a 50mm f1.8 mk1 metal mount. If I can't find one at my price then I'll just have to get a 1.4 new. OR - if I'm in a bottom fishing mood when I make the move then it will be a plastic fantastic 50mm f1.8 MK2. Break one - throw it away and get another!

I just hope I don't come across as too heavy handed. If I had received a working 18-200 Tamron then I'd certainly be singing another song of Tamron & Sigma versus the stiffly priced Canon glass.

OH YEAH ... for long term applicability I would encourage everyone to stick with lenses that are not limited to short back digital bodies. One day full frame may be common place again... and then all those short focus digital lenses will be useless. Get an over engineered ful frame lense and just enjoy the sweet spot for now!!! :love:

:confused3

Have a nice evening ya'all!
 
I don't know whether I'mjust being lucky or what but all of my Sigma have always been with metal mount. Including the 18-125 and 18-200 (which I returned to the store right away, can't stand the quality... okay for everyday use, but 100% can't be used for pro apps).

As far as 50 f/1.8 mkI vs mkII, I sold my mkI for the price of 3 mkII. The optics are exactly the same and for the past year, I'm still using the mkII with no problem whatsoever and I take the mkII wherever I go. Even if I break the mkII twice, I will still 'break-even' (PS: I bought the mkII during the period where people were complaining about the move Canon made from metal to plastic mount, there were tons of mkII used-once or BNIB that people re-sold on eBay for about $50 a piece).
 
i wonder if the sigma 125 gets some bad press due to the camera it's being used with.. i notice most of the complaints come from non xt users but the xt users love it...now that could be due to lots of factors but i wonder if the electronics or something are a little different with the xt? any thoughts on that or have i just coincidentally seen xt users that like it vs more $$ cameras that don't. could think maybe also us xt owners are just happy to have any lens but lots ( like Kelly ) with more experience like it to so it can't be a matter we are just satisfied with junk ;) i can use my sigma film convert for some mid angle stuff but if it's not great at 18 i'd need something for that range. i still think the range is worth it though since it would be easier to change a lens for the occasional wider angle and have something for 90% of what i would like to take. i hated having to change lens with my 28-80 film and 100-300 film...plus the added dust digital factor now.. am i thinking right or am i crazy?

Op i got my rebel xt from buydig.com and it came in a few days, no problems...at the time it was $683 out the door then you get a $100 rebate if purchased before july 15...i got the black body only and am getting the 18-125 lens....it seems like a good choice...if your sis is used to film slr, the dslr might seem daunting at first but she'll bet used to it quick. the canon is a great camera and i'd recommend it for sure.
 
from personal experience.

300D (non XT) vs XT vs 20D vs 30D

the AF capability progresses as the camera progresses too.

meaning I had the ocassional low-light mis-AF on the 300D, no low-light mis-AF on the XT but only when the image is backlit (this happen not only with Sigma but also with Canon lenses), even better focus on the 20D and an extremely slightly better focus with 30D (especially if you use lenses with f/2.8 or larger)
 
Kelly Grannell said:
from personal experience.

300D (non XT) vs XT vs 20D vs 30D

the AF capability progresses as the camera progresses too.

meaning I had the ocassional low-light mis-AF on the 300D, no low-light mis-AF on the XT but only when the image is backlit (this happen not only with Sigma but also with Canon lenses), even better focus on the 20D and an extremely slightly better focus with 30D (especially if you use lenses with f/2.8 or larger)

Yup....

I've not owned anything other than a Digital Rebel or 10D - but I have friends or family with XTs and 20Ds plus a couple with the higher end ones (forgot exactly which they have). The higher models definately had a faster snap to acquiring focus - and this was NOT a side by side comparison. Just a sense you get compared against what I own versus these models when you pick them up for a few frames. Plus the brighter lenses have got to accelerate the focus speed - no question about it.

So - I though I'd ADMIT... seeing tha it's fathers' day weekend and all... I think I'll swing by Canoga Camera and take a few dozen frames in the store with a Sigma 18-125. You guys got me thinking - maybe I can take a look if nothing less... no harm. Heck, I could nearly swap my Canon 20-35 for the Sigma 18-125 and NOT add a Canon 28-105 f3.5/4.5 OR 24-85 as I was considering last nite on ebay. If I then add the $300 of a new 24-85 to the resale "value" ($500?+) of my 70-300 IS then I could almost swap for a 70-200 f2.8 L ($1090 after rebate ~ I'd have to cough up another $290+shipping). THAT is something I might do - except I'll probably hesitate to weigh the merits of the IS model ... and it's hefy $600 cost addition! Wow... the difference from my 70-300 IS f4-5.6 at $580 original cost to the 70-200 f2.8 at $1090 is tolerable, but the 70-200 f2.8 IS is $1700. But then again, I could stop musing it all once I had it. :rolleyes:

91680.jpg


I'm not using the 200-300 range all that much - and the 70-200 makes great sense to concentrate on. And if doing so - then why not step up in speed as well? AND a Sigma 18-125 gently enables this without disturbing my budget much. Hmmm..... :rolleyes:

I knew I should never have started posting here on the camera recommendations..... :confused3
 














Save Up to 30% on Rooms at Walt Disney World!

Save up to 30% on rooms at select Disney Resorts Collection hotels when you stay 5 consecutive nights or longer in late summer and early fall. Plus, enjoy other savings for shorter stays.This offer is valid for stays most nights from August 1 to October 11, 2025.
CLICK HERE













DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest

Back
Top