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The beauty of mirrorless cameras

 
 
RichA
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      02-06-2012
Best to worst:

10. Fuji X100/X10
9. Olympus OM-D
8.5 Fuji X-PRO1
8.25 Olympus EPL-2
8. Sony NEX-7
7.5 Leica X1
7 Pentax Q
6.5 Panasonic GX1
6. Olympus EP-3
5.75 Panasonic GH2
5.5 Panasonic G3
5. Samsung NX200
4.75 Ricoh GXR
4.5 Nikon J1
4.25 Canon G1X
4. Nikon V1
3. Panasonic GF3
1. Pentax K-O1
 
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Irwell
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      02-07-2012
On Tue, 07 Feb 2012 13:35:57 -0500, Bowser wrote:

> On Mon, 6 Feb 2012 11:26:51 -0800 (PST), RichA <>
> wrote:
>
>>Best to worst:
>>
>>10. Fuji X100/X10
>>9. Olympus OM-D
>>8.5 Fuji X-PRO1
>>8.25 Olympus EPL-2
>>8. Sony NEX-7
>>7.5 Leica X1
>>7 Pentax Q
>>6.5 Panasonic GX1
>>6. Olympus EP-3
>>5.75 Panasonic GH2
>>5.5 Panasonic G3
>>5. Samsung NX200
>>4.75 Ricoh GXR
>>4.5 Nikon J1
>>4.25 Canon G1X
>>4. Nikon V1
>>3. Panasonic GF3
>>1. Pentax K-O1

>
> Uh, OK...


"Beauty and folly are old companions"
Ben.Franklin.
 
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Bruce
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      02-08-2012
rwalker <> wrote:
>I really don't get this fascination with mirrorless cameras. I prefer
>SLRs specifically because I'm looking right through the lens and
>seeing what film or sensor is seeing. If mirror vibration is
>potentially a problem, I use a tripod. And I've used SLRs from the
>Pentax Auto 110 to the Pentax 67 and every size in between.



How much experience do you have with mirrorless cameras?

If very little, or none, how can you possibly expect to understand why
they are so popular?

 
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nospam
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      02-08-2012
In article <>, rwalker
<> wrote:

> I really don't get this fascination with mirrorless cameras. I prefer
> SLRs specifically because I'm looking right through the lens and
> seeing what film or sensor is seeing. If mirror vibration is
> potentially a problem, I use a tripod. And I've used SLRs from the
> Pentax Auto 110 to the Pentax 67 and every size in between.


you don't see the advantages of eliminating the mirror? seriously?
 
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RichA
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      02-09-2012
On Feb 8, 2:23*pm, rwalker <rwal...@despammed.com> wrote:
> On Tue, 7 Feb 2012 12:59:02 -0800, Irwell <h...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> >On Tue, 07 Feb 2012 13:35:57 -0500, Bowser wrote:

>
> >> On Mon, 6 Feb 2012 11:26:51 -0800 (PST), RichA <rander3...@gmail.com>
> >> wrote:

>
> >>>Best to worst:

>
> >>>10. *Fuji X100/X10
> >>>9. *Olympus OM-D
> >>>8.5 *Fuji X-PRO1
> >>>8.25 Olympus EPL-2
> >>>8. *Sony NEX-7
> >>>7.5 Leica X1
> >>>7 *Pentax Q
> >>>6.5 *Panasonic GX1
> >>>6. *Olympus EP-3
> >>>5.75 Panasonic GH2
> >>>5.5 Panasonic G3
> >>>5. *Samsung NX200
> >>>4.75 Ricoh GXR
> >>>4.5 Nikon J1
> >>>4.25 Canon G1X
> >>>4. *Nikon V1
> >>>3. Panasonic GF3
> >>>1. *Pentax K-O1

>
> >> Uh, OK...

>
> >"Beauty and folly are old companions"
> >Ben.Franklin.

>
> I really don't get this fascination with mirrorless cameras. *I prefer
> SLRs specifically because I'm looking right through the lens and
> seeing what film or sensor is seeing. *If mirror vibration is
> potentially a problem, I use a tripod. *And I've used SLRs from the
> Pentax Auto 110 to the Pentax 67 and every size in between.


A tripod has little effect (and may make it worse) on mirror slap
blurring a photo.
There are literally situations where mirror and shutter slap are bad
enough so you can't stop them causing problems. Case in point, using
very long lens with a camera attached. My Nikon D300, even with
mirror lock-up blurred images with a 1000mm lens on a tripod whereas
my Panasonic G1 (much less shutter impact) didn't.
 
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Chris Malcolm
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      02-09-2012
nospam <> wrote:
> In article <>, rwalker
> <> wrote:


>> I really don't get this fascination with mirrorless cameras. I prefer
>> SLRs specifically because I'm looking right through the lens and
>> seeing what film or sensor is seeing. If mirror vibration is
>> potentially a problem, I use a tripod. And I've used SLRs from the
>> Pentax Auto 110 to the Pentax 67 and every size in between.


> you don't see the advantages of eliminating the mirror? seriously?


Not just the mirror, but the entire clockwork caboodle of mirror and
shutter curtain. No matter how little vibration these cause, it will
always be possible to choose a focal length beyond which they
significantly degrade detail resolution. Mirror lock up can avoid
mirror vibration problems, but you can't escape the vibration of
opening the mechanical shutter.

Ok, I should have said "can't easily escape" -- no doubt mounting the
lens on a granite tripod would help

--
Chris Malcolm
 
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nick c
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      02-10-2012
Bruce wrote:
> rwalker <> wrote:
>> I really don't get this fascination with mirrorless cameras. I prefer
>> SLRs specifically because I'm looking right through the lens and
>> seeing what film or sensor is seeing. If mirror vibration is
>> potentially a problem, I use a tripod. And I've used SLRs from the
>> Pentax Auto 110 to the Pentax 67 and every size in between.

>
>
> How much experience do you have with mirrorless cameras?
>
> If very little, or none, how can you possibly expect to understand why
> they are so popular?
>


I've been content to never having jumped off a bridge tied to a bungee
cord and I wonder about the mental condition of others think to do that.
Does that mean I can't question the need or popularity of bungee jumping?
 
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David Dyer-Bennet
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      02-10-2012
rwalker <> writes:

> On Tue, 7 Feb 2012 12:59:02 -0800, Irwell <> wrote:


> I really don't get this fascination with mirrorless cameras. I prefer
> SLRs specifically because I'm looking right through the lens and
> seeing what film or sensor is seeing. If mirror vibration is
> potentially a problem, I use a tripod. And I've used SLRs from the
> Pentax Auto 110 to the Pentax 67 and every size in between.


But that's exactly where live view is better than an optical
viewfinder -- it shows you what the actual *sensor* is seeing, not just
what light is coming through the lens. (Also it can be boosted so you
can see in light you couldn't see in optically.)

It also shows you 100.00% of the image, much more accurately than an
optical system can (and many optical viewfinders don't even try for
100%).

A pivoting LCD can also let you see the viewfinder from a much wider
range of angles.

Using a tripod isn't always possible. Shooting in a club or late-night
jam session is the sort of thing I do where a tripod isn't usually
possible, and mirror slap (and any other source of vibration) is a
serious issue. And tripods don't always solve the problem at
intermediate speeds -- 1/8 or 1/4, say, depending on resonant
frequencies.

They're smaller and lighter than DSLRs, and much more capable than P&S
(also smaller than some of them).

The biggest weakness (and they're clearly working to correct this; see
what Nikon says about their 1 series and Fuji about the latest Pro model
and Olympus about the OM-D) is AF speed and tracking, which you didn't
have at all with many of the SLRs you used (none of the ones you
mentioned have AF). M43 has less good low-light performance than
exceptional cameras like the D700, but they're competitive with DSLRs in
their price range.

--
David Dyer-Bennet, dd-; http://dd-b.net/
Snapshots: http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/
Photos: http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/
Dragaera: http://dragaera.info
 
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Bruce
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      02-10-2012
nick c <> wrote:

>Bruce wrote:
>> rwalker <> wrote:
>>> I really don't get this fascination with mirrorless cameras. I prefer
>>> SLRs specifically because I'm looking right through the lens and
>>> seeing what film or sensor is seeing. If mirror vibration is
>>> potentially a problem, I use a tripod. And I've used SLRs from the
>>> Pentax Auto 110 to the Pentax 67 and every size in between.

>>
>>
>> How much experience do you have with mirrorless cameras?
>>
>> If very little, or none, how can you possibly expect to understand why
>> they are so popular?
>>

>
>I've been content to never having jumped off a bridge tied to a bungee
>cord and I wonder about the mental condition of others think to do that.
>Does that mean I can't question the need or popularity of bungee jumping?



If the discussion was about a personal fascination with bungee
jumping, just as this one is about the fascination of using mirrorless
cameras, your complete ignorance of that personal fascination would
disqualify you from being able to make any useful contribution to that
discussion.

Have a nice day.

 
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David Dyer-Bennet
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Posts: n/a
 
      02-10-2012
rwalker <> writes:

> On Thu, 09 Feb 2012 21:58:35 -0600, David Dyer-Bennet <dd->
> wrote:
>
>>rwalker <> writes:
>>
>>> On Tue, 7 Feb 2012 12:59:02 -0800, Irwell <> wrote:

>>
>>> I really don't get this fascination with mirrorless cameras. I prefer
>>> SLRs specifically because I'm looking right through the lens and
>>> seeing what film or sensor is seeing. If mirror vibration is
>>> potentially a problem, I use a tripod. And I've used SLRs from the
>>> Pentax Auto 110 to the Pentax 67 and every size in between.

>>
>>But that's exactly where live view is better than an optical
>>viewfinder -- it shows you what the actual *sensor* is seeing, not just
>>what light is coming through the lens. (Also it can be boosted so you
>>can see in light you couldn't see in optically.)
>>
>>It also shows you 100.00% of the image, much more accurately than an
>>optical system can (and many optical viewfinders don't even try for
>>100%).
>>
>>A pivoting LCD can also let you see the viewfinder from a much wider
>>range of angles.
>>
>>Using a tripod isn't always possible. Shooting in a club or late-night
>>jam session is the sort of thing I do where a tripod isn't usually
>>possible, and mirror slap (and any other source of vibration) is a
>>serious issue. And tripods don't always solve the problem at
>>intermediate speeds -- 1/8 or 1/4, say, depending on resonant
>>frequencies.
>>
>>They're smaller and lighter than DSLRs, and much more capable than P&S
>>(also smaller than some of them).
>>
>>The biggest weakness (and they're clearly working to correct this; see
>>what Nikon says about their 1 series and Fuji about the latest Pro model
>>and Olympus about the OM-D) is AF speed and tracking, which you didn't
>>have at all with many of the SLRs you used (none of the ones you
>>mentioned have AF). M43 has less good low-light performance than
>>exceptional cameras like the D700, but they're competitive with DSLRs in
>>their price range.

>
> Just for the record, I have used AF, and digital SLRs. I mentioned
> the two I did because they cover the size range.


I figured you had, and then realized it wasn't explicit, just an
inference.

The RB-67 certainly has more mirror slap than smaller cameras!
--
David Dyer-Bennet, dd-; http://dd-b.net/
Snapshots: http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/
Photos: http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/
Dragaera: http://dragaera.info
 
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