dak723 said:Yes, it is an absolute bargain to buy! It is smaller and especially lighter than almost anything comparable out there. Especially if you want an Optical view finder. And the kit lens 18-55 and the 55-250 zoom are both light and very sharp.
rs said:To those of you that have the EVF-DC1, how does the size of the viewfinder image compare to any DSLR's OVFs that you have? The magnfication of the EVF is the one spec I can't track down.
Sporgon said:rs said:To those of you that have the EVF-DC1, how does the size of the viewfinder image compare to any DSLR's OVFs that you have? The magnfication of the EVF is the one spec I can't track down.
It seems a little smaller than the 5D / 6D, but larger than the bottom end Canon crop cameras.
e17paul said:I have the SL1, chosen over the M series for several reasons:
1. It's able to share lenses with my 6D when carrying both bodies - without any need to fumble with an adapter
2. It's light - I'm happy to carry it in my bag everyday without feeling the weight, either with the kit lens or a sensibly small prime.
3. It's viewfinder is built in and always there
4. It does not require live view the whole time, so it's the battery can be made to last longer.
5. It was the cheaper option at the time of purchase, preserving more money for more lenses and filters.
6. Although the touchscreen interface is good and useful, all controls can be button or dial operated when wearing gloves or if fingers are wet.
It has a few limitations:
1. It will never be as slim as an M, so even with a pancake lens will only slip into a large pocket
2. It has no wifi or GPS - I bought an EyeFi card upon purchase.
I'm happy with mine as a complement to its larger stablemate. Only if I really need high ISO or otherwise want full frame do I find the SL1 falling short of my needs. Maybe one day I will switch to all mirror less, but not yet
In summary, if you want to share lenses with a larger Canon, or typically use a viewfinder rather than the screen, then the SL1 is for you. If ultimate portability is the bigger priority, then the M may win.
Paul
thetechhimself said:Yung
I own the M3 since it was released, and have looked at the SL1, hard, many times. It's easily the most underrated camera as it's the only APS-C to have a very small form factor.
Some bottom lines...
SL1
Cheap
Smaller than any other APS-C, except the M3
Excellent video quality, better than the M3
Although only 18MP, it's the most advanced 18MP variant Canon makes/made.
DIGIC5 chip is both fast, and generates slightly more pleasing colors than the M3's DIGIC6
It has Phase Detect Autofocus meaning you never have to worry about not getting the shot
It's not pocketable
M3
Smallest APS-C
Better photo quality at 24MP, and has better low light IE ISO performance than the SL1
With the 22mm, which is an excellent take it anywhere lens, is pocketable, that's saying a lot
It's not Phase detect autofocus, so you do have to worry about getting the shot
Forget using the adapter, if you have a lot of glass you want to adapt that isn't available in a native EF-M version, not worth it as M3 + Adapter = SL1, except not as good, and not smaller.
No viewfinder, well you can buy an optional one, but that's more $$ and makes it bigger
The big advantage of the M3 is size and weight, without compromising image quality, but it's autofocus is a work in progress
I'm not saying don't get the M3, the SL1 is a better camera, period. But, you can't pocket it. The M3 you can.
What I'm hearing from you is you probably should do an M3 with a 22mm. If you want to use a different focal length, then you should consider either the G7XII which can do 24-100 and is pocketable, but isn't nearly as clean of photos, or just going SL1 which isn't pocketable.
thetechhimself said:A second thought...
I ended up getting the M (and then M2 and M3) because my 5D didn't go with me everywhere, and the PowerShots I've gone through that did, didn't cut it for image quality.
The trouble with the SL1 is it may not go with you everywhere, it's just not small enough. But, it doesn't have trouble getting the picture.
The M3 goes everywhere, but sometimes has trouble getting the picture (autofocus).
Until the M4 comes out, you have to flip that coin of not quite small enough, but powerful (SL1), or small enough but not quite powerful enough (M3)
thetechhimself said:A second thought...
I ended up getting the M (and then M2 and M3) because my 5D didn't go with me everywhere, and the PowerShots I've gone through that did, didn't cut it for image quality.
The trouble with the SL1 is it may not go with you everywhere, it's just not small enough. But, it doesn't have trouble getting the picture.
The M3 goes everywhere, but sometimes has trouble getting the picture (autofocus).
Until the M4 comes out, you have to flip that coin of not quite small enough, but powerful (SL1), or small enough but not quite powerful enough (M3)