DisneyExplorer
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2007
- Messages
- 329
I'm considering buying a slr and been reading and researching different ones and found the Canon 400d and Nikon 40x, any views on these?
The lenses you choose are arguably more important than the camera body, and you should (IMO) make sure that the lenses you purchase now or may purchase later are the best ones for your intended uses.
~YEKCIM
The D40/D40x both "suffer" from the lack of an in-body focus motor, meaning that only lenses with built in focus motors will AUTOfocus with those camera bodies.
Hey Mark, those were incredible shots on your slide show and the music was great! Thanks for sharing that with us! I have to know where the pic was taken of your two sons in the room where your youngest looks really tiny and your oldest is rather big (in comparison)? I love that! The pictures of the architecture are beautiful, I always want to do that but come home with 9 million shots of characters and 3 good non character photos. We just bought a Nikon D40 last night and can't wait to use it in a month at the parks! This time promising myself to slow down with the characters and use this camera for it's intentions.
They are very, very different companies. Canon dwarfs Nikon in size. They both sell cameras, lenses, and optical tools like scanners and binoculars. Canon also has a major business equipment business selling copiers, printers, etc. Nikon is much more focused on photography equipment and SLRs in particular. Canon makes their own sensors. Nikon buys theirs from Sony.Is there a great difference between the two manufacturers- Canon and Nikon?
Both sell similarly broad lines of gear. Both sell entry level, mid level, and professional level DSLRs. Both are widely used by professionals throughout most areas of the industry. Each has pockets of dominance (Canon with sports photographers, Nikon with landscape photographers).What about the range of equipment, do both offer similar diverse amounts of lens etc or does one struggle against the other?
While dust reduction systems sound like a great idea, I've not heard good things about them in practice. It's not clear whether the complaint is that they don't help at all or that they help but don't solve the problem. Either way, you will still have to deal with dust issues. I don't think I've seen anything that indicates that the dust reduction systems should be a major selection factor.Is the dust reduction machine (Canon 400d) highly benefical or is it not an essential?