Greetings from the Pittsburgh area

DevPreach

New member
Hi all,
I’m checking in from about 30 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I’d name the town specifically but unless you live within 5 miles of me you wouldn’t have any idea where I am. Moving on though I am coming back to photography after an 8 year hiatus due to my D90 being destroyed in a fire. I have missed having a camera around. Granted I have my phone and my dad’s old Canon Rebel XTi which ironically survived the same fire it doesn’t shoot RAW and it is hard to find batteries for it. Well I’m inheriting some money and will be getting back in to photography with a proper camera.

DevPreach


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hark

Administrator
Staff member
Super Mod
Contributor
Hi all,
I’m checking in from about 30 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I’d name the town specifically but unless you live within 5 miles of me you wouldn’t have any idea where I am. Moving on though I am coming back to photography after an 8 year hiatus due to my D90 being destroyed in a fire. I have missed having a camera around. Granted I have my phone and my dad’s old Canon Rebel XTi which ironically survived the same fire it doesn’t shoot RAW and it is hard to find batteries for it. Well I’m inheriting some money and will be getting back in to photography with a proper camera.

DevPreach


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro

Greetings and welcome! :) I'm closer to Philadelphia but was out as far as New Castle once. Nice to see a fellow Pennsylvanian on the forum! :cool:
 

Bikerbrent

Senior Member
Welcome aboard. Enjoy the ride.
We look forward to seeing more posts and samples of your work.

If you don't mind us asking, which camera(s) are you looking at?
 

Marilynne

Administrator
Staff member
Super Mod
Welcome!

Guidelines to adding a photo to your post.

1. Resize photo to 1000px on the long side.
2. Resolution set to 72ppi (Pixels Per Inch)

These guidelines will be good for viewing on a computer but will not be good for printing. This will help safeguard your copyright.
 

DevPreach

New member
Welcome aboard. Enjoy the ride.
We look forward to seeing more posts and samples of your work.

If you don't mind us asking, which camera(s) are you looking at?

Well considering that I do have limited finances I am trying to narrow it down from the following Nikon models. The D610 or D750 because these will allow me to get 3-4 lenses, battery grip, spare batteries, and the SD cards are relatively cheap compared to cfexpress and qxd cards. I have tossed around the idea of the Canon R6 or the Sony A7 III but I just am not quite sold on their specs. I know these cameras are old models and old technology but their specs fit my financial requirements and are still quite capable of delivering the kinds of things I want. I’m primarily looking for a camera that will be a good jack of all trades type camera. Something that would be decent for taking pics at the Pittsburgh Zoo, doing some family portraits, taking pics at my nieces and nephews various sporting events, and a camera that would be great to take on vacation. I definitely want full frame and dual card slots for redundancy. Any thoughts or ideas on my choices or things I should consider?

DevPreach


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro
 

Danno

Senior Member
Welcome to the forum. Hope you enjoy it here. The DSLRS you are looking at are good choices. Reasonable prices for the bodies and lenses.

if you are considering mirrorless the Z bodies are really good bodies if you listen to real reviews which excludes The Angry guy, T and C... husband and wife and the fro guy. The Z6II and 7II have grips and dual card slots... but they are more expensive than the 750
 

Needa

Senior Member
Challenge Team
Welcome!

At this point in time you should seriously consider Z mirrorless. If you buy into F mount glass and in the future they stop making DLSRs you will be stuck using adapters. Do a comparison the Z5 to the D750. It has dual SD card slots and a battery grip is available, just not a true vertical grip it has not controls. Good luck with your photography whatever you choose.
 

DevPreach

New member
Welcome to the forum. Hope you enjoy it here. The DSLRS you are looking at are good choices. Reasonable prices for the bodies and lenses.

if you are considering mirrorless the Z bodies are really good bodies if you listen to real reviews which excludes The Angry guy, T and C... husband and wife and the fro guy. The Z6II and 7II have grips and dual card slots... but they are more expensive than the 750
@Danno while you may be right about the mirrorless bodies they also use the xqd cards which if you paid attention to my previous post I said that I didn't want a body that utilizes those cards because of how expensive those cards are. Besides if I was truly to go mirrorless it would be with the Canon R6 it is a true powerhouse of a body and the sigma and Tamron lenses for the Canon EF mount adapt to it very nicely with the EF to RF mount adapters out there.
 

DevPreach

New member
Welcome!

At this point in time you should seriously consider Z mirrorless. If you buy into F mount glass and in the future they stop making DLSRs you will be stuck using adapters. Do a comparison the Z5 to the D750. It has dual SD card slots and a battery grip is available, just not a true vertical grip it has not controls. Good luck with your photography whatever you choose.

Please see above post the R6 runs circles around the Z5 so if I was to go mirrorless I would go with Canon
 

bluzman

Senior Member
Well considering that I do have limited finances I am trying to narrow it down from the following Nikon models. The D610 or D750 because these will allow me to get 3-4 lenses, battery grip, spare batteries, and the SD cards are relatively cheap compared to cfexpress and qxd cards. I have tossed around the idea of the Canon R6 or the Sony A7 III but I just am not quite sold on their specs. I know these cameras are old models and old technology but their specs fit my financial requirements and are still quite capable of delivering the kinds of things I want. I’m primarily looking for a camera that will be a good jack of all trades type camera. Something that would be decent for taking pics at the Pittsburgh Zoo, doing some family portraits, taking pics at my nieces and nephews various sporting events, and a camera that would be great to take on vacation. I definitely want full frame and dual card slots for redundancy. Any thoughts or ideas on my choices or things I should consider?

DevPreach


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro

Welcome. A D750 would certainly check all the boxes in your list of requirements and the type of photography you've described. Since you note that finances are limited, you might consider a renewed/refurbished body. NikonUSA has renewed D750s as do some other sources. I make this suggestion on the basis on my own purchasing experience of renewed bodies (D5600, D7500, and D750). All had low shutter counts (less than 2,000) and each has performed flawlessly.
 

Whiskeyman

Senior Member
How serious are you going to be, photography wise? If you are really serious and plan to stay with it for a while, I'll say to go with a more recent offering and shell out the bones for an XQD card or CFExpress card slotted camera. With what you've listed as your purchase goals, an XQD form-factor card shouldn't be beyond your means.

If you're not going to be printing very large shots, and really want to save money on your camera body, I'll say go backward from the cameras you listed to the D700, when you can find one used in excellent shape or better. I've got one and it is a great camera, even though it doesn't have the specs of the latest cameras. They are typically very durable, and can be purchased for less than $500 US. I have one and don't see me ever getting rid of it untill it's non-functioning and I can't get it fixed!

WM
 
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