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paul13walnut5
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Re: Canon Rebel T4i/650D on June 8, 2012? [CR2.5]
A) Faster lenses focus quicker, and f2.8 or faster bring things like the dual cross point sensors into play. If you aren't getting the AF you want then, yeah, maybe the f5.6 lens has to go.
B) FTM's great, do you really need to focus from 1.5m rather than say 3m? If not, flick the switch and watch your hit rate rise through the roof.
I play to some degree devils advocate. My over-riding point remains, there is a type of user who buys a better camera and thinks thats all they have to do. Their photos aren't any better, or are in some cases worse. So it must be the camera? Right?
It can't be the shitty slow lenses they use, or the fact they are shooting in auto-af point select mode can it?
I would suggest they concentrate on getting their camera working well at 200 or 300 with a decent lens and some time spent on set up, and then crop if they need to.
A sharp image taken with a 200 and cropped is better than a soft image taken at 600, or 400. No?
A) Faster lenses focus quicker, and f2.8 or faster bring things like the dual cross point sensors into play. If you aren't getting the AF you want then, yeah, maybe the f5.6 lens has to go.
B) FTM's great, do you really need to focus from 1.5m rather than say 3m? If not, flick the switch and watch your hit rate rise through the roof.
I play to some degree devils advocate. My over-riding point remains, there is a type of user who buys a better camera and thinks thats all they have to do. Their photos aren't any better, or are in some cases worse. So it must be the camera? Right?
It can't be the shitty slow lenses they use, or the fact they are shooting in auto-af point select mode can it?
I would suggest they concentrate on getting their camera working well at 200 or 300 with a decent lens and some time spent on set up, and then crop if they need to.
A sharp image taken with a 200 and cropped is better than a soft image taken at 600, or 400. No?
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