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Old March 7th 05, 08:29 AM
Kevin McMurtrie
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In article ,
measekite wrote:

I may be interested in a DSLR at some point. While I am interested in
specifications, balance and feel; my main concern is in results. Can I
assume that with moderate cropping both the D70 and DRXT will produce
very similar images and get those images with the same relative ease.
If so then the lens and noise issue will take a back seat.

I am assuming that the results will be comparable at all of the ISO speeds.


The Canon should have the edge in image quality, being that it's a
second generation of a camera that was good competition to the D70. It
will definitely do better on very long exposures.

The Canon seems to be designed as travel camera while the Nikon as a
hobby camera. The Canon is compact and comes with an ultra-light
(expendable) kit lens while the Nikon is a more standard size and comes
with a normal quality kit lens. Even then it's not a huge difference.
Better try them out.

I went with Canon a year ago because I use my camera hiking and
bicycling. A more compact camera and lighter lenses means a lot to me.
The only heavy lens I have is the 70-300 DO IS, and that can be forgiven
because its IS eliminates a tripod and it's the size of a large coffee
mug.


ian lincoln wrote:

"ian lincoln" wrote in message
. uk...


"Clyde Torres" wrote in message
.com...


"Alice" wrote in message ...


http://www.digitalreview.ca/cams/Nik...sRebelXT.shtml


I'm not sure this review puts to bed anything. The Nikon/Canon zealots
will read what they want out of it and come up with different
conclusions.

I for one have both a D70 and 20D. They are far superior cameras to the
original Digital Rebel, and from what I can see, the D70 is still
superior to the 350D DRXT. Oh,well, to each her own.


going onto the second page the kit lens for the nikon is far superior.



There certainly are more custom functions on the nikon, i wonder how many
budding amateurs would comprehend the real world practical use of each one
let alone use them to their full artistic potential. My main concern is the
sensor itself. Very low noise images even at high iso is a good thing. No
need for IS lenses if you can increase the sensitivity by 3 stops without a
serious compromise on noise.

I have heard of problems with moire patterns such as that of photographing a
roof with uniform slates lined on it. I've been shown an example of the
nikon censor producing interesting patterns of its own under these
circumstances.

The bundled raw processing software with the d70 is said to be ****e too.

My main concern as someone who sells both and is not on commission is that i
am giving an honest and informed opinion. The typical person who asks me
won't have done his reading and asks very basic questions about the cameras.
This makes me think things like custom functions and other things buried
deep in menus aren't going to be used so though on paper the D70 is better
you are paying for alot of stuff you aren't going to use. There is also the
issue of plain old image quality, how does the nikon cope in both raw and
jpeg. Such a user is more likely to be a jpeg user so which is the better
using that format?

A typical example is of someone who thinks he is going to make it as a
wedding photographer (don't ask). Typically alot of flash used to flash
exposure control is important. This means the d70. On the other hand you
aren't going to stick with the built in flash and the ex550 has flash
exposure compensation so is it an issue?

In a reasonably lit church were people aren't groping around in the dark
the EV0.5 sensitivity compared to the EV1 of the canon for metering and
focusing isn't really an issue. Black cats in coal scuttles may be one
thing but comparitively ordinary conditions i doubt it. On paper the nikon
is better but it costs £200 more even with cashback in our store.

The 350 is a nice compromise in price performance and features between the
300 and the 20D. With enlargements and cropping in consideration i think
the final resolution and sensor qualities tilt the balance in such a
customers hands.