Hi Glenn

Welcome to the DSLR club!

You'll probably find that you enjoy it so much you'll rarely pick up a
film camera again.  I've just returned from a week away on the South
Coast of New South Wales and I'd packed my old Spotmatic II thinking I'd
shoot a roll or two of slides.  The Spottie was never unpacked....

Mine's a DS but I think it's flash capabilities are the same as or
similar to the D.  In which case it can use TTL flash, although the
exposure might be a bit inconsistent.  It was the models after the *ist
series that went to P-TTL only.



Cheers

Brian

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Brian Walters
Western Sydney, Australia
http://members.westnet.com.au/brianwal/SL/




On Sun, 25 May 2008 20:24:58 -0400, "D. Glenn Arthur Jr."
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> ... and now I'm not.
> 
> Thanks to the kindness and patience of another list member, I've
> had an *ist-D in my hands for a few days now, experiencing what
> digital photography _should_ be like.  The contrast between the
> *ist-D and my non-Pentax point-and-shoot is ... well there's no
> comparison except to repeat the complaints I made earlier this
> month, and at this point I'd rather just think about niftiness
> of the *ist-D than concentrate on the p&s.
> 
> So far I haven't noticed that I'm learning new things from
> shooting a DSLR (hey, it's only been a few days), but I have
> noticed something I thought worth mentioning:
> 
>         This fancy camera doesn't seem to be making any 
>         of my old manual-camera skills obsolete; it just 
>         makes applying those skills easier and quicker.  
> 
> Oh yeah, I'm shooting mostly on the 'P' setting, but when I
> notice I'm in a fool-the-meter situation, or want to use a non-A
> lens (I was hunting birds who were hunting insects yesterday,
> and I used an old 400/6.3 preset lens to do it), or just want to
> take over from the computer for a couple of shots, the controls
> are there and the skills are here and I don't always
> particularly notice that I'm switching gears as I do it.
> 
> When I first read about HyperProgram and HyperManual modes here
> on the mailing list, I knew they sounded like something I'd find
> useful.  Even so, I underestimated how much I'd like
> HyperProgram (I haven't really done much with HyperManual yet;
> when I've had the *ist-D in 'M' mode, I've so far just treated
> it like plain old-fashioned manual-mode -- I'll get around to
> it).
> 
> It's a sweet camera.  (From reading the mailing list and looking
> at the B&H catalog I know there are sweeter Pentax DSRLs.
> Doesn't matter.  Can't afford 'em anyhow.  I'm enjoying this one
> a lot.)
> 
> A friend came over last night to drop off a scavenged rack-mount
> computer and share some Guinness.  Of course, I had to show off
> the camera.  (IIRC, he shoots Minolta for film and Canon for
> digital.)  And he had to try it out.  He had as much trouble
> putting it back down as I do.  Y'know, a gigabyte of storage
> fills up pretty quickly when a camera is being handed back and
> forth over a couple bottles of Guinness.  And suddenly the 30G
> hard drive in the computer he brought doesn't seem all that
> large after all.
> 
> I am so very much looking forward to shooting swordfighters with
> this thing this summer.
> 
> In the meantime, I'll have to search the list archives for clues
> about how to use a 'TTL' flash from the Super Program era (as
> opposed to a 'P-TTL' digital-era flash) on it, and how to make
> it not get confused when I use a pinhole lens.  (When I can
> afford a #89 or #87 filter, I'll need to figure out whether the
> metering system can see IR or not - I know the camera records
> IR.  I also need to get around to building the IR-LED array to
> use as an IR flash, like I'd planned to do a while back.)
> 
> The single biggest thing I like about it is admittedly something
> most folks probably take for granted (and should, if shooting a
> DSLR):  the fact that it fires when I press the button (unless
> the AF has to hunt), not a random interval later.  Just like my
> film cameras and in huge contrast to my digital point-and-shoot.
> 
> My single biggest complaint about it is that, being slightly 
> smaller than the PZ-10, it's a little too small for my hands.
> I've already been advised to try a grip strap, and I've been
> contemplating how to shape a thingie that'll attach via the
> tripod mount and wrap around the grip on the right-front to make
> it a wee bit larger -- I have a Dremmel, scrap wood, and a chunk
> of aluminum, and I'm not afraid to use them.  (If it were not
> for that battery comparment / handhold, the PZ-10 would be too
> small for me as well; it's not as big on the *ist-D.  The KX was
> a good size for me.)  The battery-grip accessory sounds like it
> would be useful, but it also sounds like something I should
> postpone looking for seriously until I've managed to pay for the
> *ist-D first.
> 
>                                       -- Glenn
> 
> PS:  Next on this evening's agenda:  an M42->K adaptor and the
> bellows, because I want to shoot something that's too small for
> the Sigma 50/2.8 Macro.  Wheeee!
> 
-- 


-- 
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