LetTheRightLensIn said:that's ridiculous logic
Tell me, in your opinion, why does Nikon fit the 610, 750 and 810 with a pop up flash ?
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LetTheRightLensIn said:that's ridiculous logic
Sporgon said:LetTheRightLensIn said:that's ridiculous logic
Tell me, in your opinion, why does Nikon fit the 610, 750 and 810 with a pop up flash ?
Tell me, in your opinion, why does Nikon fit the 610, 750 and 810 with a pop up flash ?
ishdakuteb said:Thus, stop complaining and start learning...
Marsu42 said:ishdakuteb said:Thus, stop complaining and start learning...
Doesn't your internal smug warning pop up if you write something like this? Prey, how much dynamic range do you figure this scene has? If it's well inside Canon's limit, a trained monkey could expose it correctly. But try again at noon, and re-shoot straight into the sun for us, then look at the shadow details again.
As a general rule of thumb.... people with inexpensive cameras also use inexpensive lenses..... People with expensive cameras use expensive lenses....neuroanatomist said:Lee Jay said:neuroanatomist said:Marsu42 said:Basically the pop-up is nice as an optical master indoors, or for small fill flash as it's very near the optical axis and the drop shadow is smaller than from a large flash on the hotshoe when used w/o bracket.
The drop shadow may be smaller with a popup flash, but the lens/hood shadow with a larger lens... Well, that's just another aspect of its uselesness.
In practice, that's almost never an issue except with ultrawides. Even with the hood on, there's no problem with a lens like the 70-200/2.8 or even the 24-105 in most cases.
Sure, it's 'almost never an issue' when you're talking about using lenses/hoods designed for a FF image circle on a crop sensor camera... The Canon EF-S 17-55mm hood casts a shadow with the popup flash.
Since you're advocating a popup on Canon FF bodies, the 'almost never an issue' logic is flawed. Consider that on Nikon FX bodies, the popup flash causes a shadow with the 24-70mm f/2.8 lens...without the hood.
I guess Canon is so stupid they haven't added a feature they know will cause problems in common use cases, while Nikon is smart enough to know users won't mind a black shadow in their images (or more likely, Nikon FF users are smart enough to know the popup is best used as an optical flash commander and not to light a scene).
neuroanatomist said:Marsu42 said:ishdakuteb said:Thus, stop complaining and start learning...
Doesn't your internal smug warning pop up if you write something like this? Prey, how much dynamic range do you figure this scene has? If it's well inside Canon's limit, a trained monkey could expose it correctly. But try again at noon, and re-shoot straight into the sun for us, then look at the shadow details again.
Mad dogs and foolish photographers go out in the noon-day sun.
And to your other point, dilbert has been complaining here for years, and he still hasn't how to confirm basic facts before posting.
Marsu42 said:ishdakuteb said:Thus, stop complaining and start learning...
Doesn't your internal smug warning pop up if you write something like this? Prey, how much dynamic range do you figure this scene has? If it's well inside Canon's limit, a trained monkey could expose it correctly. But try again at noon, and re-shoot straight into the sun for us, then look at the shadow details again.
Don Haines said:As a general rule of thumb.... people with inexpensive cameras also use inexpensive lenses..... People with expensive cameras use expensive lenses....neuroanatomist said:Lee Jay said:neuroanatomist said:Marsu42 said:Basically the pop-up is nice as an optical master indoors, or for small fill flash as it's very near the optical axis and the drop shadow is smaller than from a large flash on the hotshoe when used w/o bracket.
The drop shadow may be smaller with a popup flash, but the lens/hood shadow with a larger lens... Well, that's just another aspect of its uselesness.
In practice, that's almost never an issue except with ultrawides. Even with the hood on, there's no problem with a lens like the 70-200/2.8 or even the 24-105 in most cases.
Sure, it's 'almost never an issue' when you're talking about using lenses/hoods designed for a FF image circle on a crop sensor camera... The Canon EF-S 17-55mm hood casts a shadow with the popup flash.
Since you're advocating a popup on Canon FF bodies, the 'almost never an issue' logic is flawed. Consider that on Nikon FX bodies, the popup flash causes a shadow with the 24-70mm f/2.8 lens...without the hood.
I guess Canon is so stupid they haven't added a feature they know will cause problems in common use cases, while Nikon is smart enough to know users won't mind a black shadow in their images (or more likely, Nikon FF users are smart enough to know the popup is best used as an optical flash commander and not to light a scene).
So, on the inexpensive cameras, the lens blocking the pop-up flash is not much of an issue..... but for those with their expensive cameras and f2.8 (or faster) lenses, it is.
Perhaps that is the real reason for no pop-up flashes on the more expensive cameras...
Don Haines said:So, on the inexpensive cameras, the lens blocking the pop-up flash is not much of an issue..... but for those with their expensive cameras and f2.8 (or faster) lenses, it is.
Perhaps that is the real reason for no pop-up flashes on the more expensive cameras...
It is a generalization, not an absolute.Lee Jay said:Don Haines said:So, on the inexpensive cameras, the lens blocking the pop-up flash is not much of an issue..... but for those with their expensive cameras and f2.8 (or faster) lenses, it is.
Perhaps that is the real reason for no pop-up flashes on the more expensive cameras...
It isn't blocked by the 35/1.4L. It isn't blocked by the 24-105/4L IS. It isn't blocked by the 70-200/2.8's.
Lee Jay said:Don Haines said:So, on the inexpensive cameras, the lens blocking the pop-up flash is not much of an issue..... but for those with their expensive cameras and f2.8 (or faster) lenses, it is.
Perhaps that is the real reason for no pop-up flashes on the more expensive cameras...
It isn't blocked by the 35/1.4L. It isn't blocked by the 24-105/4L IS. It isn't blocked by the 70-200/2.8's.
I agree.candc said:It is a bit puzzling why canon decides to put a built in flash on some dslr's and not others. They seem to abide by the aps-c yes ff no rule. I don't think a popup flash is important to the wildlife shooters the 7dii is aimed at but I think it would be nice on the 6d.
Bennymiata said:If you don't want it, don't use it, but I would find a pop-up flash handy to have on my 5d3 from time to time.
neuroanatomist said:Lee Jay said:Don Haines said:So, on the inexpensive cameras, the lens blocking the pop-up flash is not much of an issue..... but for those with their expensive cameras and f2.8 (or faster) lenses, it is.
Perhaps that is the real reason for no pop-up flashes on the more expensive cameras...
It isn't blocked by the 35/1.4L. It isn't blocked by the 24-105/4L IS. It isn't blocked by the 70-200/2.8's.
But it is blocked by the EF-S 17-55mm f/2.8. So...what's significantly different about that lens compared to the ones you listed? (Since you seemed to miss this last time, hint: look at the bold part.)
Now...extrapolate that to use of those lenses on a FF camera with a popup flash. Or if that's too hard, talk to some people about those camera you posted pictures of before...
Lee Jay said:It isn't blocked by the 17-55 with the hood removed. People are supposed to use their heads.
Lee Jay said:Bennymiata said:If you don't want it, don't use it, but I would find a pop-up flash handy to have on my 5d3 from time to time.
Exactly. I don't see why people are against a feature that causes no harm when not in use, and which could come in handy at times.
Neuro, you obviously don't understandneuroanatomist said:Lee Jay said:It isn't blocked by the 17-55 with the hood removed. People are supposed to use their heads.
Yes, they are....but some don't. For example, one of the oft-stated uses of the popup flash is for outdoor fill. Fill is needed when there are shadows on the subject due to the angle of the sun, and many times that means the sun is at an angle where it's likeky to cause flare. The hood is designed to prevent that flare, but if one removes it so the flash isn't blocked...
Oh, wait...now I get it. You mean people should stick their heads in front of the lens to block the flare after removing the hood to avoid the shadow from the popup flash.