lidocaineus said:
I registered JUST to say this:
For all you people who think tillable and/or articulating screens are delicate or weaken a body, all I have to say is you must have very limited shooting experience.
- There has been no evidence of articulating screens being the source of numerous returns, warranty claims, or malfunctions.
- The usefulness of an articulating screen is incredible. Being able to shoot easily from different levels without having to contort your body into weird positions is a godsend, and if you think it's only when you shoot macro, again, I have to wonder what kind of shooting you do. And no, a 90 degree viewfinder won't help you when you're holding your camera above your head or dropping it close/on the ground. And have you ever tried to shoot yourself in a group? Do you know how much easier it is to flip a screen 180 degrees and get the framing right in real time?
- If you're worried about damage, you realize you can keep the screen locked in place, right? And that if it's an articulating screen, you can actually protect the screen even more by having it face the inside?
Once you use a hinged screen you realize just how limiting a fixed screen is. I love my 5DIII but I've lost count of the number of times I've wished I had my old 60D's rotating screen. These arguments against tilting and articulating screens are tiring.
+1000
I've had three cameras with swivel screens, and quite a few without including the 5D3. I have never had a failure of a swivel screen, and it comes in handy almost every shoot day. I really wish my 5D3 had a swivel touchscreen. I don't even bother with a screen protector with swivel screen cameras because I just keep it closed LCD side inwards when not in use or when in potential danger.
Bring on the swivel touchscreen with touch-to-focus, focus racking, DPAF, touch to shoot etc etc. Leave the naysayers behind, just like when they were objecting to autofocus in pro cameras.