Pascal, advanced Amateur Date: Sun, Mar 21, '04 at 09:59 CET If you're in situations where timing is of the essence and you need to point-focus-shoot very quickly, try the F90x, Canon EOS 30/33 (but that hunts, at times of low light) and if you have the money f100.Ī digital body with fast focussing is more so expensive as I've noticed. If your general photography is Landscapes, Portraits, or any field of photography where you can stand back and set your camera - get the F80 as you won't be disappointed in how much the pack in a few moves of your finger. So it makes you wonder what Nikon were attempting (and Canon as I've noticed in the 3 and 30/33 models) with this when all the photographer need do is attempt another focus if the first attempt is out of focus. It's an odd thing how the AF hunts on this new model but on my F90X it instantaneously finds the target without any fuss at all. In lower light the AF loses all ability and struggles. I have been able to do everything with this camera other than the more delicate things in low light concerning fast focus. I've had the F80 for a few years now and have taken it as a secondary body all over the world with me shooting about, 400 films or more with it, 400 is a minimum. everything you could ever want BUT (see Contra)
Nikon f90x preis professional#
Reginaldo Paulinho, professional Photographer Date: Fri, Oct 15, '04 at 00:09 CEST I'd prefer a F100, but cannot justify the extra expense when the F80 does pretty much everything I need. Low light focusing can be a pain sometimes. It will take you forever to figure out everything that the F80 can do. Grol, normal Amateur Date: Mon, Mar 14, '05 at 00:11 CET With the MB16 the handling is even a little better than the D70, because the F80 is ~1cm (1/2") higher.įor the price a great cam! I´d buy it again. I love my F80 it works great and is a good backup for the D70. The 50 rolls of film I shot were mostly well exposed and focussed. I bought my F80 used - so the price was really great. no AF-On button (well, the AF-L/AE-L can be reprogrammed to perform this)
quite slow AF with "screw-driver"AF telephoto lenses (70-300G at the long end) mechanical remote control (better than IR-remote) low price (got my F80 with the 2 "super kit"-lenses 28-80 and 70-300 for ~150$ in good condition) Jens, advanced Amateur Date: Tue, May 29, '07 at 18:40 CEST Definitely a "must" for who wants to travel light without any camera too showy and pro-like. Despite its plasticky feeling, I think it's a very versatile camera, with also a small flash to use now and then when you don't want to go out with too much gear. I have the F80s which can also add the data back and the exposure data printed between frames. Versatility (95% of the whole positive side)Ī whole set of interesting features at an accessible price. Dino Brusco, normal Amateur PHOTO GALLERY Date: Tue, Sep 18, '07 at 13:58 CEST