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Nikon 8800 vs Nikon 990 vs Canon 8MP Rebel vs Nikon D70
I have a old Nikon CoolPix 990, camera has been a workhorse, taken
dozens of thousands of pictures with it, most were great, some I'd say were a bit soft at times, but colors were always solid, saturated, etc. The camera is ofcourse 3.3MP, so I'm finalling looking at something bigger/better, etc. The seemingly obvious choice is the Nikon 8800, it is the flagship model, just like my 990 was many years ago. I have read dozens of reports about how it's so slow, focusing sucks in low-light, etc. My 990 is slllllooooow, I didn't realize how slow it was until I saw some newer cameras (it wasn't considered slow when it came out), but I have been able to deal with the slowness and it has rarely been a problem. My 990 has what appear to be similar focusing issues the 8800 has, in low-light it can hunt and sometimes never get to a solid focus. With my 990 I just flip to manual focus and I have ft numbers to go with (or just hit infiniti focus which is faster). I know the 8800 does not have a useful manaul focus, I have actually written Nikon directly about this and the response I got was that no CoolPix camera in the future will ever have a useful manual focus. The problem is with long zooms (my 990 is only a 3X) to predict what the focus range will be is very tough and to facilitate this on my 990 an extra icon was added to the LCD that would turn red (little flower icon) when the focus number was not accurate. Well apparently there were literately hundreds of cameras returned to Nikon because of improper focusing because nobody read the user manual and didn't notice/care the red icon. So the Nikon rep who sent the response said do not expect any CoolPix cameras to have an actual distance number on manual focusing from now on (apparently it was a bigdeal to Nikon at the time). Anyway, fast-forward to today, all that means no ft numbers for manual focusing, which seems mostly worthless to me then, I guess I could do some tests myself, at no zoom, what does 2 notches up the focus scale get me as far as distance and just try to remember, still a mess. I went to a camera store and played with the 8800 a bit, didn't take any pictures (it didn't have a card in it, who the hell has a camera store with a demo camera you play with and not put atleast a 128meg card in it...that just seems retarded...Mike's Camera, Englewood, CO). The camera seems far more lively than I expected from many reviews, zooming was rather quick I thought, and certainly faster and more precise than my 990. I have read many reports of people dissing the zoom-by-wire, which is fine, but that's what a pro-sumer camera does, all zoom-by-wires are slow and inaccurate, but useful for taking pictures with only one hand (I am often holding my son so only have one hand to do everything on the camera). So, to those experts out there is the 8800 slower than my old 990? I can't imagine it is, but honestly I don't know. I have no SLR lenses (well some old Pentax and Minolta stuff going on Ebay soon) at all, so if I was to go the dSLR route I could jump to either Canon or Nikon. I'm leaning towards Nikon, it sounds like the D70 is a bit more camera than the Rebel XT is, even though the XT is 8MP and the D70 is only 6MP. I have friends with both a Canon 10D and Nikon D100, they both love their cameras, but both have had issues with dust on the sensor, so that is scaring me a bit away from the dSLR route. I want to be able to take great/awesome pictures, and not throw my money away (i.e. spending $600 on a 8800, when I could get a D70 with (apparently a very good) lens for $850 or so, the lens isn't a 35-350mm lens like the 8800 has, but critics say it's very good.) Decisions, decisions, decision... (yes a bit of rambling now) I like the live-picture of a 8800 (and my old 990) since I often take pictures over my head, above a crowd, etc...however I've figured I could do that too with a dSLR, just don't know what I'm looking at but I could still get a picture of something easy enough. I recently looked up some sample pictures and wow do the dSLRs really have the edge there, even way up to ISO 1600 (highest the Rebel XT goes IIRC), it looked good. Argh...tough to decide what to get... Any insight (other than "don't post here you moron" and "try putting a cover on that book nexttime")? :) |
Re: Nikon 8800 vs Nikon 990 vs Canon 8MP Rebel vs Nikon D70
I don't see much reason to get an 8800-level camera. Get a
point-and-shoot that fits in your pocket, or get a DSLR. Don't freak out too much about sensor dust; just be careful and resist the urge to swap lenses 100 times a day. The 18-70 is a good lens and has enough zoom range for normal shooting. |
Re: Nikon 8800 vs Nikon 990 vs Canon 8MP Rebel vs Nikon D70
The 8800 is actually a very good camera for most users but is not perfect.
The main usability issue with cameras of its class is the electronic view finder. The EVF can be difficult to use in bright light or for tracking small objects. Most of the criticisms about these 8mp EVF cameras are by people who have never used them or seen the awesome image quality these sensors can deliver. If you like the coolpix you may be very happy with the 8800 and find it handles faster than the 990. The 8800 is so vastly more sophisticated than the 990 you will not be sorry if you purchase one. and use it as your main digital camera. The D70 is a very different breed than what you are used to. It is technically a superior solution in that it handles almost as fast as a film slr, has direct (if somewhat dim) through the lens viewing and a plethora of sophisticated menu options. It is big and heavy and if you are going to use it as a jpeg snapshot camera and don't have a compelling reason to be able to switch lenses I would recommend getting the 8800 (or another of its class). The D70 is prone to moire and does not show its real abilities until you start shooting and manipulating RAW images. If you want a dSLR and have no backlog of lenses in your closet then it is a toss-up between Canon and Nikon. The truth is, having used 8mp cameras, I would lean toward the Canon. As an owner and frequent user of an old Coolpix 990, an 8mp EVF camera and a Nikon D70 I am astounded at much of what gets posted in this newsgroup by people who clearly have never used some of these cameras or are overwhelmed by some bizarre prejudice, hung up on some technical specification or have some irrational axe to grind. The D70 is a great camera but I could list so many "problems" -starting with a strong tendency to moire--that you would wonder why anyone ever bought one of them. |
Re: Nikon 8800 vs Nikon 990 vs Canon 8MP Rebel vs Nikon D70
"bmoag" <aemd@verizon.net> writes:
> The D70 is prone to moire and does not show its real abilities > until you start shooting and manipulating RAW images. If the D70 is really prone to moire, then shooting RAW won't help. I've heard it can have some visible moire with some very specific types of subject. > As an owner and frequent user of an old Coolpix 990, an 8mp EVF camera and a > Nikon D70 I am astounded at much of what gets posted in this newsgroup by > people who clearly have never used some of these cameras or are overwhelmed > by some bizarre prejudice, hung up on some technical specification or have > some irrational axe to grind. The D70 is a great camera but I could list so > many "problems" -starting with a strong tendency to moire--that you would > wonder why anyone ever bought one of them. Because there are tons of D70 shots with no moire problems. However, I mostly agree with you that someone without an existing collection of Nikon lenses should probably consider a Canon over the D70. |
Re: Nikon 8800 vs Nikon 990 vs Canon 8MP Rebel vs Nikon D70
I still have a Coolpix 950 and 800 plus a Canon S500. After agonizing
like you, I recently bought an 8800 and would again if I had to do it all over. I've taken over 500 pictures in a variety of situations and feel it has many strong points you won't find on a dlsr. I also considered a Canon 350XT, Nikon D70, and and Canon 20D. The lens is extremely good. On many images I am limited only by pixel sampling, and with 8 Mp, that means there is an incredible amount of detail in the picture. I make full use of the long zoom. It's nice to have it there always without changing lenses. The image stabilization is great, and for me, makes up in many ways for the lack of higher ISO. The BSS feature also helps in that regard. I assume you have that on the 990. I used it to take some interior hand-held shots of a train station last week with 1/4 second exposures, and the ones that BSS picked out were as sharp as if I had used a tripod. The movie feature works very well. The faults, or rather, features you mention are there, but really haven't bothered me. I am used to pressing the shutter button half-way while composing a shot, so the shot fires immediately when I press it the rest of the way. I don't take action pictures that much, so all lags don't really bother me. I have not had much problem with low light focus in real-world use, though I can create situations where it has problems. The Canon 350 XT that I tried side-by-side with the 8800 had almost the same trouble focussing in low light. Incidentally, with some experience it is possible to maually focus the 8800 quite accurately- you just have to know how to evaluate the image either on the EVF or LCD display. I find the EVF ecellent, and this is the first camera I have had that did not have an optical view finder. In addition to the issues you brought up, under some conditions you can see a bit of chromatic aberration at very high enlargement. It depends on the lighting, f number, zoom amount, etc. I find it quite acceptable, and besides, there is simple software to remove it if it bothers you. If you are interested, I can email you some pictures that I think yuo will find impressive. I still find it hard to believe the "dynamic range" of detail in a picture. Joe |
Re: Nikon 8800 vs Nikon 990 vs Canon 8MP Rebel vs Nikon D70
Quote: "If you are interested, I can email you some pictures that I
think yuo will find impressive. I still find it hard to believe the "dynamic range" of detail in a picture. " Sure, I'd love to see any pictures... fj40rockcrawler [at] gmail [dot] com |
Re: Nikon 8800 vs Nikon 990 vs Canon 8MP Rebel vs Nikon D70
fj40rockcrawler@gmail.com wrote:
> I have a old Nikon CoolPix 990, camera has been a workhorse, taken > dozens of thousands of pictures with it, most were great, some I'd say > were a bit soft at times, but colors were always solid, saturated, > etc. The camera is ofcourse 3.3MP, so I'm finalling looking at > something bigger/better, etc. We went through a similar process recently. We felt the 8800 was restricted by the small aperture at maximum zoon (f/5.2?), and instead my wife purchased a Panasonic FZ20 and I got the Panasonic FZ5. These are a lot cheaper than the Nikon and they are "only" 5MP - but that's enough for us and significantly better than the 990. We have both been really pleased with the results. A swivel viewfinder would be an improvement, though. I used to have an SLR, but found it was so heavy with the lenses and flash that I ended up only using it when I was forced to, but with the FZ5 it's so light and compact you can take it anywhere. If you don't need the long image-stabilised zoom of the FZ5/FZ20/8800, and wide-angle is more your thing, then the Nikon 8400 with its 24mm wide-angle is worth a look. Cheers, David |
Re: Nikon 8800 vs Nikon 990 vs Canon 8MP Rebel vs Nikon D70
"Paul Rubin" <http://phr.cx@NOSPAM.invalid> wrote in message
news:7xacm3w37u.fsf@ruckus.brouhaha.com... > "bmoag" <aemd@verizon.net> writes: > > The D70 is prone to moire and does not show its real abilities > > until you start shooting and manipulating RAW images. > > If the D70 is really prone to moire, then shooting RAW won't help. > I've heard it can have some visible moire with some very specific types > of subject. > > > As an owner and frequent user of an old Coolpix 990, an 8mp EVF camera and a > > Nikon D70 I am astounded at much of what gets posted in this newsgroup by > > people who clearly have never used some of these cameras or are overwhelmed > > by some bizarre prejudice, hung up on some technical specification or have > > some irrational axe to grind. The D70 is a great camera but I could list so > > many "problems" -starting with a strong tendency to moire--that you would > > wonder why anyone ever bought one of them. > > Because there are tons of D70 shots with no moire problems. However, > I mostly agree with you that someone without an existing collection of > Nikon lenses should probably consider a Canon over the D70. I have the Fuji A330. It too is tuned for sharper pictures (weaker anti aliasing filter) and it rarely shows the color moiré, but with some subjects with fine repeating patterns, it can show. Canon has got it nailed with image quality. I have the original digital rebel, and while the new version has higher pixel count, that is not the reason to upgrade. Lower noise, and less sharpening halos (not to mention the smaller size and more features) make the Rebel XT at the top for budget dSLR cameras for image quality. I'm not sure they could do any better with a Bayer sensor. IMHO, there is no better option than a Bayer type sensor without giving up something large in return. -S |
Re: Nikon 8800 vs Nikon 990 vs Canon 8MP Rebel vs Nikon D70
"Paul Rubin" <http://phr.cx@NOSPAM.invalid> wrote in message
news:7xacm3w37u.fsf@ruckus.brouhaha.com... > "bmoag" <aemd@verizon.net> writes: > > The D70 is prone to moire and does not show its real abilities > > until you start shooting and manipulating RAW images. > > If the D70 is really prone to moire, then shooting RAW won't help. > I've heard it can have some visible moire with some very specific types > of subject. > > > As an owner and frequent user of an old Coolpix 990, an 8mp EVF camera and a > > Nikon D70 I am astounded at much of what gets posted in this newsgroup by > > people who clearly have never used some of these cameras or are overwhelmed > > by some bizarre prejudice, hung up on some technical specification or have > > some irrational axe to grind. The D70 is a great camera but I could list so > > many "problems" -starting with a strong tendency to moire--that you would > > wonder why anyone ever bought one of them. > > Because there are tons of D70 shots with no moire problems. However, > I mostly agree with you that someone without an existing collection of > Nikon lenses should probably consider a Canon over the D70. I have the Fuji A330. It too is tuned for sharper pictures (weaker anti aliasing filter) and it rarely shows the color moiré, but with some subjects with fine repeating patterns, it can show. Canon has got it nailed with image quality. I have the original digital rebel, and while the new version has higher pixel count, that is not the reason to upgrade. Lower noise, and less sharpening halos (not to mention the smaller size and more features) make the Rebel XT at the top for budget dSLR cameras for image quality. I'm not sure they could do any better with a Bayer sensor. IMHO, there is no better option than a Bayer type sensor without giving up something large in return. -S |
Re: Nikon 8800 vs Nikon 990 vs Canon 8MP Rebel vs Nikon D70
On 6 Jun 2005 13:09:42 -0700, fj40rockcrawler@gmail.com wrote:
<snip: 990 --> 8800 / D70 / XT ?> > >Any insight (other than "don't post here you moron" and "try putting a >cover on that book nexttime")? :) I went through something similar shortly before christmas; in my case this was to be my first serious foray into digital, but I started looking at the 8700/8800 and got dragged towards the D70 (which I got and am very happy with). I won't rehash it all -- see: http://groups.google.co.uk/group/rec...d6a8d25088bc9f (or http://tinyurl.com/cmc4z) and many of the responses (particularly, I think, Frank ess' and Joseph Miller' [and not _just_ because they like what I wrote :-)]. My _personal_ conclusion was that the 8700/8800 wasn't the way to go FOR ME -- I'm NOT saying it's a bad camera, just wasn't right for me. The size is "up there" among the DSLRs, so you lose out on a more compact p&s's portability, and the cost is (or was, I've not been keeping track), close enough that it was getting into the "don't spoil the ship for a ha'peth of tar" territory (i.e., when you're into the £700-900 range, the extra £100 or so isn't that much different). As I said at the end of my account above, if I had to choose again, I would probably choose not between an 8800 vs. D70/XT; but between a really good ~4/5M p&s (which in many situations will take as good photos, and -- being more compact -- will be more likely to be available), vs. a D70/XT (which offer the open-endedness of a dSLR system, but probably won't be carried as much as a p&s might be). Hope this helps somewhat. Regards, Graham Holden (g-holden AT dircon DOT co DOT uk) -- There are 10 types of people in the world; those that understand binary and those that don't. |
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