neuroanatomist said:
Well, as I stated, I wanted to start simple.
But...you make a good point. As we all know, putting the subject in the center of the frame always makes for the strongest, most compelling images.
Ah, the sarcasm is still there ;D
Have you used one John? Tell you what, go actually use one.
Just to dispel a coupe of inaccuracies I've seen so far.
The D810's shutter is quieter than the Mk3. The D800's clunker shutter wasn't of course, but the D810's is. It's very quiet.
The frame rate that John keep banging on about?
Well, Nikon's 36 megapixel, non OLPF 64 ISO studio camera can 'only do 5fps', in 36 meg mode and the 22 meg Mk3 can do 6FPS. That is true, but not the whole story if FPS is what you need.
Anyone who wants real machine gun FPS would clearly go for the D4s, but the D810 has a pipeline limitation with it's 36 meg.
It looks like the rumoured D750 will fill that gap, and deliver a higher FPS 24 meg FF.
That means Nikon will have the D610, the D750, the D810 and the D4s.
The real Mk3 equivalent is not the D810, and it was never meant to be, which can be seen from no OLPF, 36 meg, high low base DR and a base of 64.
The D750 will be that camera.
The D810 just happens to hold it's own with the Mk3, a camera that it wasn't designed to match. It's philosophy is complete different.
Canon on the other hand don't even have a killer high MP, wide low ISO DR studio/landscape camera.
No one mentions that the D810, really the best studio DSLR you can buy, can also double up as a sports cam and does 6fps in DX mode, delivering a very respectable 16 MP image.
Add the battery grip and that's 7FPS.
So when comparing like for like, let's actually do that shall we? Accuracy, not sarcastic cherry picking would be the better approach if comparisons are going to be made, and it seems they are.
You want a couple of things the Mk3 had that the D810 still doesn't?
Saved settings on the dial. I loved that on my Mk3, and my Gh4, and miss it on my D800/810.
The rate button. Tiny little addition that crept in on the Mk3 but I loved that. Being able to star images while a client was changing for the next setup up was so cool.
2 years later, Nikon still haven't added that, and I'd doubt it's on the D750 either.
Compare like for like, it makes everyone look less like fanboys and more like intelligent adults with no axe to grind.