I Need Some Camera Advice

Phantom1

Charter Member
Any thoughts on these camera choices?

Nikon D60

Olympus E-620

Canon 12.2 Megapixel EOS Digital Rebel

Sony® Alpha 10.2 MP Digital SLR
 
LOL at Fund :rofl:

I have the D40 and it is great. I find the Auto mode perfect for just about anything you shoot. I have always felt the big deal with the Nikons is the lens and that still holds true with this camera. I have 2 Nikon lenses and the quality and clarity is incredible. I'm sure the camera doesn't have some of the features that a pro like Jay uses but it sure makes amateurs like me look pretty good.
 

Attachments

  • potomac09 837.jpg
    potomac09 837.jpg
    37.4 KB · Views: 5
  • July42009 011.jpg
    July42009 011.jpg
    126.2 KB · Views: 10
  • July42009 093.jpg
    July42009 093.jpg
    97 KB · Views: 15
Last edited:
Yeah- the camera means a little, the lenses alot. The difference between the consumer lenses and the pro lenses is huge- but so is the price. But the Nikon consumer lens is worth the few extra bucks.
 
Canon xsi or t1i.

Overall the highest rated with decent stabilized lenses. Also consistently best buys in Consumer Reports cause of the sales that happen. All EOS lenses will fit, so lense prices are reasonable.

If you're talking a Pro camera, not running on automatic, I don't know. Freeze and Pete use Canon's. Jay uses Nikons. The rest I don't remember.
 
You can not really go wrong with any of them. They are all good. Go to a store that carries them all and see what one fits you best and has the features that YOU need. My mom tried out one of the Nikons and she was overwhelmed with all the features so she went with a more simplified aproach. I got a Nikon and I am still working out all the adjustments.
 
You can not really go wrong with any of them. They are all good. Go to a store that carries them all and see what one fits you best and has the features that YOU need. My mom tried out one of the Nikons and she was overwhelmed with all the features so she went with a more simplified aproach. I got a Nikon and I am still working out all the adjustments.

Good advice. No amount of research can beat actually holding the thing in your hand to see how it feels to you.

Any pro or prosumer level camera is not 'automatic'- you have to tell it what you want it to do. One of the things I like about the D300 is it will allow you to input up to six different settings 'banks' depending on what kind of shooting you are doing.

I have 4 different ones set up (thanks to Mike Hagen)- sports/action, point and shoot, weddings/portraits, and landscape/nature. There are about 120 different possible settings, so I keep a cheat sheet in the bag. :sifone:
 

Attachments

  • D300_Setup_sports.jpg
    D300_Setup_sports.jpg
    109.4 KB · Views: 15
d5000 is a nice pick, you will like it. I got a d 90 earller this year and i am still learning. There is a site called nikon cafe that is pretty good, when you go looking for a lens go there and read about it. I thought i wanted some and when i read about them and the problems every one was having i started looking at something else
 
Back
Top