Thinking about D70... Need advice

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I'm seriously thinking about getting a D70, but when I look at comparison
photos on the Net I'm not impressed. Most of the photos from the D70 look
kinda fuzzy to me,
and the reviews all say you can do this or that to sharpen them up, and
that's what a digital SLR is like. I've also heard complaints about dust
getting on the CCD. Yet, this camera is very highly rated. (I used to be a
professional photographer, so the idea of trading up to a digital SLR seems
like a great idea since I have a bunch of Nikon lenses.)

Convince me why I should by the D70, as it seems to get rave reviews even
though other fixed lens cameras get better marks on picture quality.

I guess what scares me is that when you look at the reviews in PC World they
love the D70, but they give the picture quality a "very good," while they
give
fixed lens (zoom) cameras, costing far less, picture quality reviews of
"outstanding." Why would someone "settle" for lesser quality at that price?
It
makes no sense. Shouldn't the Nikon blow away the lesser cameras?

Thanks

Sheldon
sheldon@sopris.net
 
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Sheldon wrote:
> I'm seriously thinking about getting a D70, but when I look at
comparison
> photos on the Net I'm not impressed. Most of the photos from the D70
look
> kinda fuzzy to me,
> and the reviews all say you can do this or that to sharpen them up,
and
> that's what a digital SLR is like.

Look at reviews on dpreview, luminous-landscape.com and megapixel.net.
They are not totally unbiased but give you a fair idea.

Also, it would help if you posted links to the reviews and photos you
refer to in your original posting. Just might be that you are not
looking at the right places.

> Convince me why I should by the D70, as it seems to get rave reviews
even
> though other fixed lens cameras get better marks on picture quality.

You are comparing apples to oranges. A P&S digital camera with a Leica
lens might outperform the most expensive dSLR with an el-cheapo Tokina
lens - the 28-80mm kit lens kind.

Again, post links to reviews that rate a P&S higher than the Nikon D70.

>
> I guess what scares me is that when you look at the reviews in PC
World they
> love the D70, but they give the picture quality a "very good," while
they
> give
> fixed lens (zoom) cameras, costing far less, picture quality reviews
of
> "outstanding." Why would someone "settle" for lesser quality at that
price?
> It
> makes no sense.

PCWorld isn't a good place to look for camera reviews, IMHO. Pick a
good photography magazine or look at the sites I listed above. They
provide a more accurate and useful review of photo gear.

> Shouldn't the Nikon blow away the lesser cameras?

It does. Goto a store, try out the Nikon D70 and any P&S digital
camera. You won't need to read a review after that to make your
decision.

I have a Canon 300D and another guy in my club has a Panasonic FZ20.
The camera looked damn neat and pics looked fine from the Panasonic. I
held the viewfinder of the Panasonic upto my eye and realised there was
no way I was ever going back to P&S (hint: EVF). There simply is no
comparing a P&S with a dSLR.

- Siddhartha
 
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Owamanga wrote:
> I haven't investigated this yet, but that last claim I saw about Ken
> never having touched the equipment he reviewed assumed that different
> pages of Ken's website were written in a particular order (ie, the
> review of a camera page was *OLDER* than the different page that
> claims he hasn't picked on up).

Snip from http://kenrockwell.com/canon/1dsii.htm posted on 20th
december' 04.
-------------snip begin-----------------------
Like most things from Canon I'll presume it works great. I have not
played with one.

16 megapixels is no big deal compared with 8 megapixels, see The
Megapixel Myth.

If you have work to shoot today by all means get one. It will give
spectacular results. If you're not a full time pro just know that the
photos you make with this are going to look the same as whatever else
you're shooting today.

Don't get one if you have to go out on a limb to afford it. It's not a
big deal. You are paying a stiff premium over cameras with very similar
performance.
------------snip end-------------------------

The guy makes several assertions. If I made similar assertions, I would
expect people to believe me if I tested a 16MP vs 8MP, posted some
objective tests and parameters and then gave a conclusion.


Snip from http://kenrockwell.com/canon/20d.htm posted on 16th december'
04
-------------snip begin-----------------------
Watch the flash performance. My friends own several Canon 1D-MkIIs and
they HATE the poor flash exposure control. This means they always have
to tweak with the flash settings to get a decent result. By comparison
the Nikon D70 is extremely good. The one or two shots I made were fine.
------------snip end-------------------------

Ok, so we are to believe what your friends say? And you took a large
sample of "one or two shots" to come to conclusion about the flash.

As a reader, I am interested in conclusions of various reviews posted
on the net. What I am more interested is in is your testing process and
methodology. If your process and methodology consists of hearsay, one
or two shots and having never touched the camera then I wouldn't go
about quoting this guy's reviews on any NG, in the least.

- Siddhartha
 
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Owamanga wrote:
> Okay, so the guy is honest, owns up to not having used one and
> produces a very short review.
Just being honest does not help if your review is worthless.

> He is crazy, but makes a number of interesting points, therefore I
> don't agree with you that just because of one rather shabby review
> that everything else he says should be discounted. We all make
> mistakes.
Read the rest of the reviews. I agree that all comments made by a
person should not be discounted because of some of the comments made by
the person are baseless. But then the credibility of such a person
isn't much either.

> For example, on the 6th Jan you made a claim that digicams only use 8
> bits per channel, and well, you were basically wrong. That doesn't
> mean we should discount your further posts does it?
Yes, and on being corrected, I readily owned up to making a mistake. Do
you see any such retraction at Mr.Rockwell's site or postings?

"RONKELI" made a reference to Mr.Rockwell's site as a basis for his
assertion. I merely pointed out that the particular reviwer wasn't
credible enough to be quoted any NG, in my opinion, given his rather
unique testing methodology.

- Siddhartha
 
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"Sheldon" <sheldon@XXXXXXXXsopris.net> wrote in message
news:vJidnR3mR6ktwXrcRVn-ow@comcast.com...
> I'm seriously thinking about getting a D70, but when I look at comparison
> photos on the Net I'm not impressed. Most of the photos from the D70 look
> kinda fuzzy to me,

Very strange. While I can't say much for the sharpness of digital pictures
in general, I think the D70 does very well. Digital photos are generally not
as sharp as film -- I think Nikon said it would take a 19Mp camera to
achieve even the resolution of ISO 100 film. Nevertheless, digital has much
greater color depth than film, which can give the appearance of a very sharp
image at normal viewing distances.

I have a tough time imagining any P&S that could compete with the D70. The
D70 has a bigger sensor than any P&S and it has far better lenses. I suspect
that the reviewer didn't know what he was doing. How much can PC World know
about cameras, anyway? Check out www.dpreview.com for some real test
pictures.

Dust on the sensor is a problem with all digital SLRs, but not a big one. It
is easily removed with a blower bulb. If you get dust during a shoot it will
show up on your pictures, but it is easily corrected in post processing.
People talk argue about what to do with "hard to remove" dust or stains, but
honestly, if you don't go poking your fingers around in there you are not
going to get anything like that on your sensor. Sure, you might get salt on
your sensor -- if you change lenses while standing on the bow of a pitching
fishing boat with spray flying all over you and the camera pointed directly
into the spray. So don't do that.

On the whole, I don't think you are ready for a digital SLR. It sounds to me
like you are setting yourself up for a big disappointment. Digital is not
better or worse than film, but it is different. If you perceive these
differences as worse, you are not going to like digital. If you are not
willing to take the time with post processing or you don't like regaining
the creative control that photographers used to enjoy with black and white,
digital is not for you.
 
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Sheldon wrote:
> I'm seriously thinking about getting a D70, but when I look at comparison
> photos on the Net I'm not impressed. Most of the photos from the D70 look
> kinda fuzzy to me,
> and the reviews all say you can do this or that to sharpen them up, and
> that's what a digital SLR is like. I've also heard complaints about dust
> getting on the CCD. Yet, this camera is very highly rated. (I used to be a
> professional photographer, so the idea of trading up to a digital SLR seems
> like a great idea since I have a bunch of Nikon lenses.)
>
> Convince me why I should by the D70, as it seems to get rave reviews even
> though other fixed lens cameras get better marks on picture quality.
>
> I guess what scares me is that when you look at the reviews in PC World they
> love the D70, but they give the picture quality a "very good," while they
> give
> fixed lens (zoom) cameras, costing far less, picture quality reviews of
> "outstanding." Why would someone "settle" for lesser quality at that price?
> It
> makes no sense. Shouldn't the Nikon blow away the lesser cameras?
>
> Thanks
>
> Sheldon
> sheldon@sopris.net
>
>
>
This is what i think: If you need the camera now and cant afford Canon
20D, then get the D70. If you dont need it now, wait to see what is the
replacement for eos 300D, because it probably has 8MP sensor and what
more important, Digic II processor which seems to be effective.

The only problem i see in the image quality with d70 is the móire you
probably have heard already, but that seems to occur only in extremely
rare situations and to my thinking it is not a big problem.

Usability seems to be a huge plus to D70 and it includes a lot of
options and settings even though lacking the setting for exact color
temperature. And to my liking D70's continuous shooting is very cabable.
I found this site which compares D70 and 20D:
http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/20dd70.htm
Even though Canon 20D costs a few hundreds more, it still does not beat
the Nikon D70 completely.

I have also been thinking to get D70, but i heard speculations about a
model replacing 300D, so i want to see what that is like before i make
my decision.

-Ari Nevalainen
 
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RONKELI wrote:
> http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/20dd70.htm
> Even though Canon 20D costs a few hundreds more, it still does not
beat
> the Nikon D70 completely.

<cough> As has been discussed earlier on the NG, Ken Rockwell is a guy
with the magical power to review cameras without ever touching them. So
his reviews are worth almost ______ </cough>
 
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On 14 Jan 2005 02:38:28 -0800, "Siddhartha Jain"
<losttoy2000@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:

>RONKELI wrote:
>> http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/20dd70.htm
>> Even though Canon 20D costs a few hundreds more, it still does not
>beat
>> the Nikon D70 completely.
>
><cough> As has been discussed earlier on the NG, Ken Rockwell is a guy
>with the magical power to review cameras without ever touching them. So
>his reviews are worth almost ______ </cough>

I haven't investigated this yet, but that last claim I saw about Ken
never having touched the equipment he reviewed assumed that different
pages of Ken's website were written in a particular order (ie, the
review of a camera page was *OLDER* than the different page that
claims he hasn't picked on up).

If this is the case, the claim is floored.

Ken has some strong opinions, and his reviews would be more acceptable
if he saw the world in shades of gray instead of black & white. He's a
man with pure caffeine running through his veins.

--
Owamanga!
 

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"Siddhartha Jain" <losttoy2000@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1105711258.738317.315070@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
| Owamanga wrote:
| > I haven't investigated this yet, but that last claim I saw about Ken
| > never having touched the equipment he reviewed assumed that different
| > pages of Ken's website were written in a particular order (ie, the
| > review of a camera page was *OLDER* than the different page that
| > claims he hasn't picked on up).
|
| Snip from http://kenrockwell.com/canon/1dsii.htm posted on 20th
| december' 04.
| -------------snip begin-----------------------
| Like most things from Canon I'll presume it works great. I have not
| played with one.
| | ------------snip end-------------------------
|


| -------------snip begin-----------------------
| Watch the flash performance. My friends own several Canon 1D-MkIIs and
| they HATE the poor flash exposure control.
| ------------snip end-------------------------
|
| Ok, so we are to believe what your friends say? And you took a large
| sample of "one or two shots" to come to conclusion about the flash.
|
| As a reader, I am interested in conclusions of various reviews posted
| on the net. What I am more interested is in is your testing process and
| methodology. If your process and methodology consists of hearsay, one
| or two shots and having never touched the camera then I wouldn't go
| about quoting this guy's reviews on any NG, in the least.
|
| - Siddhartha
|

Mr. Rockwell sounds like the Bill Murray character on "Saturday Night Live"
from way back when--the movie reviewer who reviewed movies that he hadn't
seen.

Rick
 
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On 14 Jan 2005 06:00:58 -0800, "Siddhartha Jain"
<losttoy2000@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:

>Owamanga wrote:
>> I haven't investigated this yet, but that last claim I saw about Ken
>> never having touched the equipment he reviewed assumed that different
>> pages of Ken's website were written in a particular order (ie, the
>> review of a camera page was *OLDER* than the different page that
>> claims he hasn't picked on up).
>
>Snip from http://kenrockwell.com/canon/1dsii.htm posted on 20th
>december' 04.
>-------------snip begin-----------------------
>Like most things from Canon I'll presume it works great. I have not
>played with one.
>
>16 megapixels is no big deal compared with 8 megapixels, see The
>Megapixel Myth.
>
>If you have work to shoot today by all means get one. It will give
>spectacular results. If you're not a full time pro just know that the
>photos you make with this are going to look the same as whatever else
>you're shooting today.
>
>Don't get one if you have to go out on a limb to afford it. It's not a
>big deal. You are paying a stiff premium over cameras with very similar
>performance.
>------------snip end-------------------------
>
>The guy makes several assertions. If I made similar assertions, I would
>expect people to believe me if I tested a 16MP vs 8MP, posted some
>objective tests and parameters and then gave a conclusion.
>
>
>Snip from http://kenrockwell.com/canon/20d.htm posted on 16th december'
>04
>-------------snip begin-----------------------
>Watch the flash performance. My friends own several Canon 1D-MkIIs and
>they HATE the poor flash exposure control. This means they always have
>to tweak with the flash settings to get a decent result. By comparison
>the Nikon D70 is extremely good. The one or two shots I made were fine.
>------------snip end-------------------------
>
>Ok, so we are to believe what your friends say? And you took a large
>sample of "one or two shots" to come to conclusion about the flash.
>
>As a reader, I am interested in conclusions of various reviews posted
>on the net. What I am more interested is in is your testing process and
>methodology. If your process and methodology consists of hearsay, one
>or two shots and having never touched the camera then I wouldn't go
>about quoting this guy's reviews on any NG, in the least.

Okay, so the guy is honest, owns up to not having used one and
produces a very short review.

I've never posted a link to this review of Ken's, and I agree, it's
fairly worthless. I don't believe I have ever posted a link to any of
Ken's reviews without also providing a number of alternatives.

He is crazy, but makes a number of interesting points, therefore I
don't agree with you that just because of one rather shabby review
that everything else he says should be discounted. We all make
mistakes.

For example, on the 6th Jan you made a claim that digicams only use 8
bits per channel, and well, you were basically wrong. That doesn't
mean we should discount your further posts does it?

<g>

... and I am not perfect either ..

--
Owamanga!
 
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"Owamanga" <nomail@hotmail.com> wrote in message
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>
> .. and I am not perfect either ..

But good enough for government work.
 

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Sheldon wrote:
>
> Convince me why I should by the D70, as it seems to get rave reviews even
> though other fixed lens cameras get better marks on picture quality.

The 8MP cameras are sharper and they automatically include a lot of
sharpening & image contrast in-camera. A DSLR is going to look fuzzy &
washed out until you work on it in photoshop some but it's going to take
more rich photos ultimately with the larger sensor plus it has a really
advanced metering & flexibility to add lenses. If you've done geeky
photography before you probably will have the patience to learn the
digital darkroom techniques. If you dread computers, I'm not sure a DSLR
is all that great.
 
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Sheldon <sheldon@XXXXXXXXsopris.net> wrote:

> I guess what scares me is that when you look at the reviews in PC World they
> love the D70, but they give the picture quality a "very good," while they
> give fixed lens (zoom) cameras, costing far less, picture quality reviews of
> "outstanding."

Good lord, don't pay attention to a camera review in PC World! What in the
world do they know? Read what *photographers* have to say about it; they
realize you can't review a camera like you would review a computer.

I've even found the picture quality "results" at places like dpreview.com
to be mostly worthless. They always, in some vague attempt to "objectify"
the results, choose some arbitrary combination of unfortunate settings
and go with it. I don't *care* what the pictures look like shooting JPEGs
with medium sharpness and color saturation; I will never use that setting.

What I want to see in terms of quality results is the best that an
experienced photographer can get out of the equipment without any
restriction on settings or technique. That's what matters. Anything
else is not only a review of the camera, it's a review of the image
processing and everything else under particular conditions with those
specific settings. It doesn't mean anything.

> It makes no sense. Shouldn't the Nikon blow away the lesser cameras?

It absolutely does. Don't worry about it.

--
Jeremy | jeremy@exit109.com
 

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On Thu, 13 Jan 2005 22:47:19 -0700, "Sheldon" <sheldon@XXXXXXXXsopris.net>
wrote:

>I'm seriously thinking about getting a D70, but when I look at comparison
>photos on the Net I'm not impressed. Most of the photos from the D70 look
>kinda fuzzy to me,

Don't look at photos on the net! Look at photos out of the camera... I can
Email you something if you like... un-touched...

>and the reviews all say you can do this or that to sharpen them up, and
>that's what a digital SLR is like.

Bull. I've owned lots of cameras, and the other day I was re-cataloging all of
my photos, and I wanted to bring my older directories up to a new standard, and
one thing I noticed right away was all of the folders marked "originals" because
the photos all needed sharpening or brightening or something - there are NO
folders in my Nikon partition that have 'originals' directories - all the photos
are un-edited! This is the first camera I've owned where I don't have to play
will all the shots!

> I've also heard complaints about dust
>getting on the CCD.

ALL cameras with openable lenses can have this problem. It can also be fixed
easily.

> Yet, this camera is very highly rated. (I used to be a
>professional photographer, so the idea of trading up to a digital SLR seems
>like a great idea since I have a bunch of Nikon lenses.)

There you go! The Nikonian web site can tell you what lenses are compatible.

>Convince me why I should by the D70, as it seems to get rave reviews even
>though other fixed lens cameras get better marks on picture quality.

I LOVE my D70! I took 1000 pics the first month!

>I guess what scares me is that when you look at the reviews in PC World they
>love the D70, but they give the picture quality a "very good," while they
>give fixed lens (zoom) cameras, costing far less, picture quality reviews of
>"outstanding."

I'd say these people are BLIND as BATS! I have a Dimage 7i, and the D70 beats
it up quite severely... remember that fixed P&S cameras are limited to ISO 100
for noise - I shoot at ISO 1000 all the time... Maybe they are getting
kick-backs from their advertisers...

> Why would someone "settle" for lesser quality at that price?
>It makes no sense.

Because it's a lie.

> Shouldn't the Nikon blow away the lesser cameras?

It does.

>Thanks

You're welcome

>Sheldon
>sheldon@sopris.net
>

Bob
 
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>>I'm seriously thinking about getting a D70, but when I look at comparison
>>photos on the Net I'm not impressed. Most of the photos from the D70 look
>>kinda fuzzy to me,
>
> Don't look at photos on the net! Look at photos out of the camera... I
> can
> Email you something if you like... un-touched...

Well, I used to work with all black and white and do all my own processing
and printing of 16x20 and 20x24 prints, so I was definitely a camera geek,
and miss the "hobby" part of the equation. I also did a lot of my own color
processing and mixed up my own developers for pushing film speed. I'm going
to call Nikon and see if my older lenses will fit, that will probably make a
difference, but what I like about the D70 is the fact that I can take action
photos with it (one of the few digital cameras that will), and I used to do
that professionally. I also don't mind getting out a light meter now and
then.

I would love to see a jpeg image from your D70. Could you send me a macro
of a flower or something that has a lot of detail in it? That would be
great. I'll also try to hit the camera store and see if they'll let me fire
off a few shots with a D70 and some high-end P&S cameras I've been looking
at.

Thanks for your insight.

Sheldon
sheldon@sopris.net
 
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"Sheldon" <sheldon@XXXXXXXXsopris.net> wrote in message
news:vJidnR3mR6ktwXrcRVn-ow@comcast.com...
> I'm seriously thinking about getting a D70, but when I look at comparison
> photos on the Net I'm not impressed. Most of the photos from the D70 look
> kinda fuzzy to me,

it's a matter of photographer and lens used as well - but i don't have to
tell you that. i am pretty new to photography and am really really happy
with my d70.

> and the reviews all say you can do this or that to sharpen them up, and
> that's what a digital SLR is like.

did you never do any darkroom work with your 35mm equipment?

> I've also heard complaints about dust
> getting on the CCD.

this is not a nikon or d70 specific problem - there are cams that are known
for performing far worse in terms of dust bunnies - afaik there isn't a
single dslr that has a solution for this problem yet. still, i started
cleaning my sensor myself with the copper hill equipment and following the
instructions here: http://www.pbase.com/copperhill/ccd_cleaning - dust on
the sensor or not would be something to decide whether to go with digital
slrs or not, not which model to go with i think.

> Yet, this camera is very highly rated. (I used to be a
> professional photographer, so the idea of trading up to a digital SLR
seems
> like a great idea since I have a bunch of Nikon lenses.)

if you have a bunch of nikon lenses already, why not rent a d70 for a
weekend and see how its preforming for you?

> Convince me why I should by the D70, as it seems to get rave reviews even
> though other fixed lens cameras get better marks on picture quality.
> I guess what scares me is that when you look at the reviews in PC World
they
> love the D70, but they give the picture quality a "very good," while they
> give
> fixed lens (zoom) cameras, costing far less, picture quality reviews of
> "outstanding." Why would someone "settle" for lesser quality at that
price?
> It
> makes no sense. Shouldn't the Nikon blow away the lesser cameras?

well - like others pointed out already, this is comparing apples and
oranges. popphoto may not be the mag of choice for all photographers, yet it
probably is the most widely accepted and respected photography magazine i
know of - and the d70 was their camera of the year 2004 - you can find
plenty of info in last years' issues. i think the d70 review was in the
march or april issue.

sid
 

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"sid derra" <ng_NO_@_SPAM_emolife.net> wrote in message
news:34r2hkF4b9fh4U1@individual.net...
> "Sheldon" <sheldon@XXXXXXXXsopris.net> wrote in message
> news:vJidnR3mR6ktwXrcRVn-ow@comcast.com...
>> I'm seriously thinking about getting a D70, but when I look at comparison
>> photos on the Net I'm not impressed. Most of the photos from the D70
>> look
>> kinda fuzzy to me,

You can't put a 6-megapixel image on a web page (or a computer screen) at
full resolution. Anything you see on the Web has been downsampled to less
than a megapixel.
 
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On 14 Jan 2005 in rec.photo.digital.slr-systems, Sheldon wrote:

> I would love to see a jpeg image from your D70. Could you send me a
> macro of a flower or something that has a lot of detail in it? That
> would be great. I'll also try to hit the camera store and see if
> they'll let me fire off a few shots with a D70 and some high-end P&S
> cameras I've been looking at.

Take a Compact Flash card for the D70 and whatever the P&S use when you
do this. If you really like to tinker, also make sure you fire off a
couple in Raw mode. D70 raw files take up just under 6 meg; large basic
..jpgs are about 750K.

--
Joe Makowiec
http://makowiec.org/
Email: http://makowiec.org/contact/?Joe
 
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Thanks for the advice.


"Joe Makowiec" <makowiec@invalid.invalid> wrote in message
news:Xns95DEED40A7214makowiecatnycapdotrE@24.24.2.166...
> On 14 Jan 2005 in rec.photo.digital.slr-systems, Sheldon wrote:
>
>> I would love to see a jpeg image from your D70. Could you send me a
>> macro of a flower or something that has a lot of detail in it? That
>> would be great. I'll also try to hit the camera store and see if
>> they'll let me fire off a few shots with a D70 and some high-end P&S
>> cameras I've been looking at.
>
> Take a Compact Flash card for the D70 and whatever the P&S use when you
> do this. If you really like to tinker, also make sure you fire off a
> couple in Raw mode. D70 raw files take up just under 6 meg; large basic
> .jpgs are about 750K.
>
> --
> Joe Makowiec
> http://makowiec.org/
> Email: http://makowiec.org/contact/?Joe
 

Roger

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Archived from groups: rec.photo.digital.slr-systems (More info?)

On Thu, 13 Jan 2005 22:47:19 -0700, "Sheldon"
<sheldon@XXXXXXXXsopris.net> wrote:

>I'm seriously thinking about getting a D70, but when I look at comparison
>photos on the Net I'm not impressed. Most of the photos from the D70 look
>kinda fuzzy to me,

Here is a shot of a Day Lilly in our yard last Summer.
http://www.rogerhalstead.com/DayLilly.htm
this was a hand held shot.

There is a link to a crop to show the limits of that particular shot.
It would be sharp even if 2 or 3 screens wide and mine is set at 1280
X 1024. Again the crop was from the TIFF saved as a JPG.
I see no remarks as to post processing so this should be pretty much
an unretouched, or post processed image. It was shot with the 18-70
kit lens.

There are also links to a lot of shots with on Oly E-20N.
BTW, I do normally use the E-20N in the JPG mode (highest quality) as
I now use it for most ly recording images for my "builder's diary".
That and when used with TIFFs the files from the 5 megapixel E20N are
several times larger than those from the D-70. And...that e-20 N is
unbelievably slow compared to the D-70 which is almost like shooting a
35 mm SLR. It's instant on and is almost instantaneous when shooting
except for the focus time.

For the price, "I think" the D-70 is a very good value. OTOH I also
like the new Canon 20D. I happen to have a pretty good set of Nikor
lenses and the 20 D was not available when I purchased the D-70 to
that made it an easy choice. The D-70s are now available at a pretty
good discount which makes them even more appealing. The new DX lenses
appear to be of good quality as well.


>and the reviews all say you can do this or that to sharpen them up, and
>that's what a digital SLR is like. I've also heard complaints about dust
>getting on the CCD. Yet, this camera is very highly rated. (I used to be a

Dust on the sensor is a problem with any dSLR. You learn to be
careful when changing lenses. I shoot a lot of action, outdoor
photography and often around crowds which creates a lot of dust. I
have only had dust on the sensor once since I purchased the camera and
I took delivery the first week or two they were available.

>professional photographer, so the idea of trading up to a digital SLR seems
>like a great idea since I have a bunch of Nikon lenses.)
>
>Convince me why I should by the D70, as it seems to get rave reviews even
>though other fixed lens cameras get better marks on picture quality.
>
>I guess what scares me is that when you look at the reviews in PC World they
>love the D70, but they give the picture quality a "very good," while they

I'd read some reviews from dpreview and others. Just do a search on
"Nikon D-70 reviews". You should find lots of them. Remember there
are reviews and then there are reviews.

>give
>fixed lens (zoom) cameras, costing far less, picture quality reviews of
>"outstanding." Why would someone "settle" for lesser quality at that price?
>It
>makes no sense. Shouldn't the Nikon blow away the lesser cameras?

I think you will find it pretty much does (in most cases) with the
larger sensor and larger lenses.

There are only two things I'd change if I had the choice. I'd prefer
to be able to lock up the mirror for shooting and to have a cable
release.

Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member)
(N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)
www.rogerhalstead.com

>
>Thanks
>
>Sheldon
>sheldon@sopris.net
>
>