jukka said:
johnf3f said:
Daniel Flather said:
privatebydesign said:
His gear list is all Nikon, save for the G12.
Yes that is true. He is begging borrowing Canon stuff as his D4 and D800 do not work properly/reliably. Nikon cannot fix these cameras.
as his D4 and D800 do not work properly/reliably?
in what way?
Here is a true story, on a long-term phenomenon and who many seems to have forgotten
Beijing Olympics.
One of the best sports photographers seek Canon service tent for the third time, the photographer does not get as sharp images as his colleagues who use Nikon equipment. After visit the service tent 3 times he got a straight answer, what do you expect, it's a Canon.
The photographer wanders off to Nikon and borrow 2 x D3 house with lenses.
After the Olympics, there was a massive switch to Nikon, which still persist in Europe,today many of the major newspapers, photo agencies use D3s D4.
So do not talk too loudly about an AF point who is not working as it should in a semi pro camera and from the first series
As I understand it, the problem is solved
Ei vittu järjestely voi hyvinkin yksinkertaistettu viestiä
Well the D4 and D800 both suffered lockups, the D800 and D800E both suffered AF sensor misalignment, the D4 and D800/E have a very peculiar screen hue, unless green is your favourite colour. The D600 has a dust issue on the sensor that is an engineering fault. The D4 and D800/E had/has a tethered Live View issue when in M mode. The D800 had various card write speed issues when released, and many Nikon bodies just won't support some popular cards (Kingston). The D800 has flash master triggering issues.
Then, of course, there were the exploding D800's, well a few of them went pop. The D800 has long exposure issues too, and what about the ViewNX2 to Lightroom issue where D800 users couldn't open their Nikon exported files in Lightroom?
Now if we get bored with body issues we could move to lens issues? Nikon has a ridiculous list of compatibility issues with its lenses, yes you might be able to physically mount a lens to a body, but that doesn't mean that body can actually take an image, when you look at Nikon's lens "solutions" it makes EF, EF-s and EF-m seem so logical. Then there are the various reports of bad sharpness at distance with the 200-400, a lens I am pretty sure Canon will get right, and I for one would far rather have something I can rely on tomorrow than something I can't rely on today. The Nikon tilt shifts are optically on a par with Canon's MkI models and are factory set with tilt and shift orientation, again just like Canon's MkI T/S lenses, but they are priced hundreds of dollars higher, indeed they are priced similar to Canon's MkII lenses. How about the current 70-200 f2.8 at $2,400 that is, in actuality, closer to a 70-135 at MFD? But we could list things like this forever.
The grass always seems greener on the other side of the hill..........
But, if AF is your raison d'êtres, then anybody who has used a D4 and a 1Dx together can be in no doubt that for the majority of situations the 1Dx is the better performing camera. Of course most of us have many more than one narrow criteria for choosing a system, be that lenses, crop factors, sensor performance etc etc, but, once you turn pro you can have as much dynamic range as God himself, if the image is not in focus you are not getting paid.
Canon did themselves immeasurable harm amongst pros with the 1D MkIII AF fiasco, they have remade a lot of friends with the 1Dx.