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Old July 30th 18, 01:53 PM posted to rec.photo.digital
Carlos E.R.
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Posts: 278
Default 25 days to Nikon throwing the towel as the defender of the DSLRagainst the onslaught of mirror-less.

On 2018-07-29 22:01, nospam wrote:
In article , Carlos E.R.
wrote:

I never understood well why a digital camera needed a mechanical mirror.

the same reason film cameras did, so that the viewfinder has an optical
path through the lens.

while digital viewfinders are much better than they used to be, they
are still not as good as a ttl optical viewfinder, particularly with
sports and low light. there is also no battery drain with an optical
viewfinder and focusing is faster.


And the digital display is actually seeing what the "film" is seeing. It
might in fact apply the digital processing that the final photo is going
to get so that the photographer can best decide on settings and timing.


except that a digital display is delayed versus pure optical.

it takes time to read the data off the sensor, process it and send it
to the display.


Surely less than 1/50 S (video speed).


the latency is shorter than it used to be and won't matter for still
life, but *will* matter for sports or other action photography as well
as very low light.


Well, for very low light the display could enhance the picture as if we
were using a night visor, so that could be a definite improvement. I do
astrophotography, and finding the red moon on the eyepiece the other day
was impossible. On the display it was also difficult (my camera doesn't
have dark enhancement or I have not found it), but it was doable.



The point of the SLR was that the photographer would see the same as the
film was going to see. Well, the digital display is one step further on
that road.


it's on a different road, with different tradeoffs.


Sure.

And as Tims points out, there can be a display inside the eyepiece instead.


there can, but it will never be as good as pure optical, at least not
until the laws of physics are overturned, which isn't going to happen
any time soon.

for example, try using a digital viewfinder in extremely low light.
either it blacks out because the light level is too low, the frame rate
drops to compensate or it amplifies what it can 'see' and the
viewfinder is too noisy to be of much use.

with an optical viewfinder, your eyes adjust.


As I wrote above, I was in exact this situation and my experience was
different.

there is also no battery drain with an optical viewfinder (or heat).


Well, my camera lights up the display when using the viewfinder with the
settings instead of the scene. So, no gain. There is no quick button to
disable it. It just times out and switches off, till I make a photo and
then displays it.

I simply carry two batteries. Sigh. I would need a charger for the car.


--
Cheers, Carlos.