olyflyer
Forum Pro
Did you ever tried the OM1 with a motor drive? A real heavy beast that was compared to any DSLR, even if not as heavy as the F3 with motor...
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If I find myself in the position of having to go elsewhere, Nikon is the direction I'd be going, and the 16-85mm f3.5-5.6 AFS VR Nikkor (24-120 equivalent) is the lens I'd be buying to use with either a D5000 or D300s.(I realize this is going off topic, but why is it that 14-54 or 12-60 equivalent lenses seem to be lacking on APS-C? The Canon, Nikon and Pentax f2.8 standard zooms are $1000+ and have less reach, as does Tamron's less expensive 17-50. I know these are all constant aperture lenses, but I wouldn't want f5.6 on the long end either. Sigma's 17-70 looks to be the closest match, but doesn't appear to measure up to the Zuikos in IQ. If Oly does ditch 4/3, these sorts of options are very disappointing.)
IMHO an African Elephant is too large a pet for a one bedroom apartment. A microbe is too small a pet in a 30 room mansion. Opinions vary.i see lots of negativity towards the size of larger gear, but who decided 'big is bad' ?
And when is big too big? And small....... too small?
They are all good points. Add to that a sexist consideration.whenever "it" is to big or bulky or heavy (or valuable, or can't be exposed to the elements) that it limits your freedom, then it's too big
Have you tried the camera straps that clip onto the front of your pack?Finally we have the D3 bag. I hate carrying this. A wedding is OK, a fifteen mile hike is purgatory. I can use a rucksack, but then you never bother to use the camera.... Won't fit on the Harley or the Triumph, but fits in the top box on the KTM, just.
This does seem like one of the better options, I agree. If I was looking for lens speed for ISO reasons, I'd probably be quite happy; but I'm more concerned with DOF control, and f5.6 is a long way from f3.5 (on my 14-54) on the long end. (Since I prefer squarer formats (4:5, 1:1, etc.) the larger APS-C sensor doesn't reduce DOF much at all.)If I find myself in the position of having to go elsewhere, Nikon is the direction I'd be going, and the 16-85mm f3.5-5.6 AFS VR Nikkor (24-120 equivalent) is the lens I'd be buying to use with either a D5000 or D300s.(I realize this is going off topic, but why is it that 14-54 or 12-60 equivalent lenses seem to be lacking on APS-C? The Canon, Nikon and Pentax f2.8 standard zooms are $1000+ and have less reach, as does Tamron's less expensive 17-50. I know these are all constant aperture lenses, but I wouldn't want f5.6 on the long end either. Sigma's 17-70 looks to be the closest match, but doesn't appear to measure up to the Zuikos in IQ. If Oly does ditch 4/3, these sorts of options are very disappointing.)
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/545654-USA/Nikon_2178_16_85mm_f_3_5_5_6G_ED_VR.html
Not nearly as fast as my 12-60, I know, and not built nearly as well, either....but it works with what would be two superior cameras where the higher ISO ability will offset being slower by one stop at the long end than the Zuiko and the couple of reviews I have read on the lens are very good, and $630 is a good price.
Very similar to my system, but with a 620, and boy it all gets heavy in a backpack, at least to me... But it sure is a nice package, compact but dense.E3 plus 7-14 plus 12-60 plus 50-200, my fave all purpose system. For now.
No, not a beast but it is huge and heavy.I don't have either motor drive, but I do have the winder 2. I wouldn't call and OM-1 with the winder a beast.
The DOF advantage is 1 stop with the Nikon DX format. The difference between the 14-54 and the 16-85 is 1 and 1/3 stop in aperture, so I don't think you'd notice the DOF difference between the two. The 1 1/3 stop difference is noticeable in shutter speed but not in DOF. If more DOF control is necessary there are plenty of fast and cheap primes to do that with, where the DOF differences clearly are noticeable. These mid range zooms have limited use in anything other than general photography for which they are great, but for DOF control the only alternatives to primes are the top range type of constant aperture zooms. Olympus is no exception. Not even the top range zooms can match the fast primes when it comes to DOF control.This does seem like one of the better options, I agree. If I was looking for lens speed for ISO reasons, I'd probably be quite happy; but I'm more concerned with DOF control, and f5.6 is a long way from f3.5 (on my 14-54) on the long end. (Since I prefer squarer formats (4:5, 1:1, etc.) the larger APS-C sensor doesn't reduce DOF much at all.)If I find myself in the position of having to go elsewhere, Nikon is the direction I'd be going, and the 16-85mm f3.5-5.6 AFS VR Nikkor (24-120 equivalent) is the lens I'd be buying to use with either a D5000 or D300s.(I realize this is going off topic, but why is it that 14-54 or 12-60 equivalent lenses seem to be lacking on APS-C? The Canon, Nikon and Pentax f2.8 standard zooms are $1000+ and have less reach, as does Tamron's less expensive 17-50. I know these are all constant aperture lenses, but I wouldn't want f5.6 on the long end either. Sigma's 17-70 looks to be the closest match, but doesn't appear to measure up to the Zuikos in IQ. If Oly does ditch 4/3, these sorts of options are very disappointing.)
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/545654-USA/Nikon_2178_16_85mm_f_3_5_5_6G_ED_VR.html
Not nearly as fast as my 12-60, I know, and not built nearly as well, either....but it works with what would be two superior cameras where the higher ISO ability will offset being slower by one stop at the long end than the Zuiko and the couple of reviews I have read on the lens are very good, and $630 is a good price.
lol tell me about airplane seating, i have this picture to send to Singapore airlines about their dreadful seats on the Airbus A380, I'm 6'7" and i couldn't even get the food tray into position without hitting my knees, truly the world feels as if it's made for tiny people some times.Some of the Oly products appear to be designed for children or tiny adults. They seem to be designed by the same people who design airline seating...
Maybe when they grow up, they'll realise some of us are 6'2" and have large hands.
--
Al Patterson
I think it was this day . . .i see lots of negativity towards the size of larger gear, but who decided 'big is bad' ?
And when is big too big? And small....... too small?