I'll go out on a limb here and say that if you have a PnS camera, just sit back and enjoy the ride and don't worry about trying to photograph anything. Some of the scenes are so dimly lit that they are a challenge for a high-ISO dSLR.
~YEKCIM
Do you mean what type of camera? If so, then a DSLR.With what type of camera?
With really dark rides like PotC, you'll want you highest ISO and widest aperture. In most cases, that won't be enough to get a really sharp shot.
Do you mean what type of camera? If so, then a DSLR.
You can hope for a breakdown right in front of something cool too.
You can hope for a breakdown right in front of something cool too.
I believe that all Canon bodies will use a red/infrared cross-hatch pattern for focus assistance if you use an external flash unit. It's not nearly as disturbing as using a flash. However, it's still not nothing, so it might offend people. It might also look much worse than it really is on the infrared security cameras that I suspect they use to monitor the rides.6) Manual focus (Nikon may be better with AF; Canon uses the flash to AF)
Wandering a bit further off topic...I would generally avoid f/22 on a typical DSLR sensor. Beyond f/16, you start to lose sharpness because of diffraction. The same holds true with 35mm film or a full frame sensor, but the tradeoff between more DOF and less sharpness starts about a stop higher. There is a pretty good explanation here on Bob Atkins site.3) Lens f8-f22
You can hope for a breakdown right in front of something cool too.
We took a quick ride on SSE right before dinner at LeCellier one night and we stopped right at the switchboard operator spot and I didn't have my camera. I'll never think that a quick walkthrough doesn't require a camera again.
Do you mean what type of camera? If so, then a DSLR.