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Photography Q&A
Rookie photog looking for advice from fanatics
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<blockquote data-quote="Chucktin" data-source="post: 751840" data-attributes="member: 44180"><p>In general - get the best lenses you can afford. Most Nikon bodies will have VG shutter and ISO accuracy.</p><p>The big difference between the bodies is the menu structure and the storage. Some bodies are structured to give a consumer bells and whistles for stills, while others will be hybrids so the user has video tools as well.</p><p>Digging down into the Nikon universe, the true "pro" models will be the ones with the fastest transfer to storage and the lowest signal to noise. These figures are obscured and usually difficult to pry out of the advertising garbage.</p><p>As to lenses try to avoid the ones with plastic (lens) elements, kinda hard to do. And a 4 to 1 zoom is ... interesting but you're sacrificing qualify for bragging rights.</p><p>As per usual you get what you pay for.</p><p></p><p>Sent from my Pixel 4a using Tapatalk</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Chucktin, post: 751840, member: 44180"] In general - get the best lenses you can afford. Most Nikon bodies will have VG shutter and ISO accuracy. The big difference between the bodies is the menu structure and the storage. Some bodies are structured to give a consumer bells and whistles for stills, while others will be hybrids so the user has video tools as well. Digging down into the Nikon universe, the true "pro" models will be the ones with the fastest transfer to storage and the lowest signal to noise. These figures are obscured and usually difficult to pry out of the advertising garbage. As to lenses try to avoid the ones with plastic (lens) elements, kinda hard to do. And a 4 to 1 zoom is ... interesting but you're sacrificing qualify for bragging rights. As per usual you get what you pay for. Sent from my Pixel 4a using Tapatalk [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
Rookie photog looking for advice from fanatics
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