disneyboy2003
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2008
- Messages
- 805
Went to Costco (both weren't working there) and Best Buy yesterday to see both. I have to say I kept going back to the canon but am not sure exactly why. I liked some things about the nikon but had trouble figuring out all the menus. With the canon, I was able to figure it out fairly easily. I'm not the most technological person so figure that accounts for it. I do think the nikon has a faster turn around on picture speed and the tilt screen is kind of appealing. I just can't figure out why the canon seems to hold my attention more. I have been "price shopping" both all day and have found a good deal on the canon which puts it with the 18-55 and 55-250 lens at about $730 after tax and approx. $150 less than the nikon. I just want to make sure I'm making the wisest decision since for me, this is a lot of money.
I think that an intuitive menu is pretty important. When you're "out on the field" using your camera, you're not going to have your User Manual out there with you, so you *need* to be able to easily find the menu option you need.
I'm not quite sure about the "faster turn around on picture speed", or how much "faster" one camera is to the other. dSLR cameras are generally very fast to begin with, so will a slightly faster camera make a BIG difference in your photography? If you're a sports photographer, it might. If you're doing portraits, it probably doesn't make a difference.
I looked at the specs for both cameras. The Nikon D5000 has a shot-to-shot time of 0.49 seconds (link). The Canon T1i has a shot-to-shot time of 0.40 seconds (link). While these numbers are different from what you experienced at Costco, it seems that there is a 0.09 second difference between the 2 cameras. Will you notice a 0.09 second difference?
If you're into sports photography, then you'll need to set these cameras on their "continuous mode." In this mode, the Nikon D500 can take photos at 4 frames per second (0.25 seconds per shot). In this mode, the Canon T1i takes photos at 3.4 frames per second (0.30 seconds per shot). Again, is this 0.05 second difference relevant to your photography?
The tilt screen feature sounds pretty nice, but as a dSLR shooter, you really should be using this feature pretty sparingly. I would only use it for rare photos where you have to contort to weird positions to get the shot, like raising the camera up high above a crowd or having the camera at ground level.
Do a quick Google search for "Canon T1i vs Nikon D5000" and you'll find *dozens* Web pages dedicated to this very question, such as:
- http://gizmodo.com/5234607/canon-rebel-t1i-vs-nikon-d5000-entry+level-dslr-battlemodo - picked the Canon "by a nose"
- http://www.digitalreview.ca/content/Nikon-D5000-D90-Compared-to-Canon-Rebel-T1i-500D.shtml - gives you a HUGE list of each camera's advantages
- http://www.neutralday.com/nikon-d5000-vs-canon-eos-rebel-t1i-500d-best-of-the-entry-level-dslrs/ - says it's a toss-up
Again, both are very capable cameras, and you really *can't* go wrong with either of them. Around the world, there are very happy owners of both cameras.
Plus, Costco has a very liberal return policy, doesn't it?