mustafaakarsu said:
Hi!
I'm using a Canon 5D MIII with 24-105 and 100mm L Macro
I'm mostly interested in landscape, landscape astrophotography and Macro.
Unfortunately I feel that my kit is heavy, so I'm thinking to swap it with Fuji X-T1 with 16-55 f2.8 lens and Zeiss 50mm Macro (I'll upgrade this to Fuji 120mm Macro when it's available)
Do you think I'd miss a lot after this switch?
Thanks in advance for your help
Oh where do I start....
Long story short - I have a 6D with a bunch of Sigma Art lenses and basic L series zooms (24-105, 17-40).
I wanted smaller gear, so I tried:
Panasonic G3, GX7, Fuji XE-2, X-T1.
For the Fuji I had the 18-55, 10-24, 35 1.4, 60mm 2.4 lenses, so quite a lot of them...
Landscape wise I think Fuji system is quite competent, but:
- the X-Trans sensor processed in Lightroom produces "smearing artefacts" (google this for more info),
- X-Trans files are SLOW to process in Lightroom, on average 3x times slower to import/export than any Bayer sensor,
- RAW files are large (compared to pixel count)
Now for other drawbawcks, non-landscape related....
X-E2 was quite poor with moving subjects (my kids), so I took the plunge and gave Fuji even more of my money, thinking X-T1 will be the answer... And it almost was.
The AF was much better, but the camera didn't give me enough confidence that the Focus was spot on, so I ended up taking 3 times as many shots as I did with Canon - and for a good reason, as the Fuji still had random AF failures (focused on the background for example).
But the biggest issue was the handling. I thought I'll like the idea of aperture dials, shutter speed dials and all that. But in reality it sucked. Why? The dials were quite stiff to turn, so I needed to take the camera away from my eye to adjust anything. In my 6D I can do everything while still looking through the viewfinder.
And viewfinder... My Goodness... X-T1 has a nice "small TV" in it, but it is just that - a display. As other commenters pointed out - it suffered horrible blackouts, especially when shooting in Burst mode. Tracking my kids running around was very very hard.
What surprised me the most though was a side effect of a smaller bulk - the camera felt more like a toy, and I didn't end up using the same rigour when shooting. I was throwing it around like a Point and Shoot, didn't take the time to e.g. crouch as much as I should, or compose the shot adequately.
Also, smaller and lighter cameras are easier to introduce the camera shake (physics).
Another thing - lenses.
Canon has a nice lineup of decent quality and CHEAP lenses (24-105, 17-40, Sigmas non-art etc.). Fuji has some crap lenses (XC series), and VERY expensive "proper" lenses (XF), but nothing in the middle.
So I ended up selling my 17-40 for X, and had to pay almost twice as much for the Fuji 10-24, which wasn't even that much smaller!
One of the staple Fuji lenses, 35mm 1.4 had very "digital" bokeh, was slow to focus....
So in the end I sold all the Fuji stuff, and overpaid the mortgage with the money - it's a better use of cash
One more thing - some Fuji lenses (35mm, 60mm) are NOISY. I didn't use a Canon lens that made any noise since... 5 years? I was SHOCKED that Fuji lenses could sound this bad in 2015 - and nobody even mentions it!
So why did I end up selling the Fuji? The reason is simple. Originally I wanted to switch from Canon to Fuji altogether, but the Fuji system just wasn't delivering... I took about 6000 shots with both the XE2 and XT1, and I had some keepers, but the rate was much lower than for my 6D.
One more thing - flash support... Don't get me started... Canon is Ferrari, Fuji is 1960s Ferrari (fully manual, single-shot mode only). It even disables the flash in Continuous shooting mode! I find this inexplicable.
PS. Lumix G3/G7X - similar story, albeit they suffered from NOISE in the blue skies even at their base ISO 200.
PS2. All small cameras have handling handicaps. There isn't a more comfortable camera to USE than a DSLR. There are more comfortable cameras to CARRY, but not USE
Anyway, good luck
