had a quick google of the 40d, its 5mp less than the 500d, what makes it a better choice? excuse my ignorance here![]()
I find this hard to believe; Canon literature and experience say 3fps tops..Well I have owned a 350D for over 4 years and have been very happy with it and must certainly question some of your statements and others on here.
To start with I get (RAW) 5fps using an IS lens and a reasonably charged battery.
No, it is horrible, unless it's at f/8 in the middle of the zoom range. It's soft wide open, soft at the wide end of the zoom.. a reasonable stop gap if you're skint but bettered immeasurably by the IS version or a nice set of primesI certainly don't think the 18-55mm lens is as poor as people seem to say - obviously it can't compete with L glass, but then the price is slightly different!
The small grip is all good if you have small hands, it doesn't humour sausage fingers much though. Also, the jog wheel on the back of the xxD series bodies allows far more rapid navigation.Ergonomically I find the 350D is very easy to use.
Good stuffI don't worry about the small size of the screen because I use the histogram to make sure my levels are right, and use a lage 22" CRT monitor to properly view and edit the images later on.
This is true, but all things being equal higher pixel density = higher noise, and makes greater demands on the glass you hang off the front.And 15 - or 21.1 - MP allows you to crop an image and still produce a good picture - far more than 8 or 10MP.
This, IMO should be the only reason to upgrade.. rather than having a few hundred notes burning a hole in one's pocket..I do intend to upgrade to a 50D as soon as finances allow - probably in the new year - simply because I feel that I have reached the limits of what I can do with the 350D.
No it doesn'tEdit: And yes, the 350D does have spot metering.
Originally Posted by petersmart
Well I have owned a 350D for over 4 years and have been very happy with it and must certainly question some of your statements and others on here.
To start with I get (RAW) 5fps using an IS lens and a reasonably charged battery.
I find this hard to believe; Canon literature and experience say 3fps tops..
Originally Posted by petersmart
And 15 - or 21.1 - MP allows you to crop an image and still produce a good picture - far more than 8 or 10MP.
This is true, but all things being equal higher pixel density = higher noise, and makes greater demands on the glass you hang off the front.
Originally Posted by petersmart
Edit: And yes, the 350D does have spot metering.
No it doesn't It does however have centre weighted, which I think you're confusing with spot metering...
Well I have owned a 350D for over 4 years and have been very happy with it and must certainly question some of your statements and others on here.
To start with I get (RAW) 5fps using an IS lens and a reasonably charged battery.
I can easily produce "noiseless" pics at 1600 ISO using Neat Image and my own profiles for that program - which also allows me to produce sharp images in dim lighting.
I certainly don't think the 18-55mm lens is as poor as people seem to say - obviously it can't compete with L glass, but then the price is slightly different!
Ergonomically I find the 350D is very easy to use.
I don't worry about the small size of the screen because I use the histogram to make sure my levels are right, and use a lage 22" CRT monitor to properly view and edit the images later on.
And 15 - or 21.1 - MP allows you to crop an image and still produce a good picture - far more than 8 or 10MP.
I do intend to upgrade to a 50D as soon as finances allow - probably in the new year - simply because I feel that I have reached the limits of what I can do with the 350D.
Edit: And yes, the 350D does have spot metering.
I would have thought shutter speed would be limited by phyiscal constraints on the mirror assy and buffer size rather than the CF card speed - I use(d) Extreme III cards in both 350D and 40D and got the advertised framerate with each..Well I can certainly state that 5 is correct - I have just tried and counted.
Perhaps 4 years ago that was correct when CF cards were slower, I now use a 4GB Peak card which I have had for about 18 months, and 5 is achieved, falling to 4 if I take another series staright away.
Allow a few seconds then I get 5fps again.
I can't really comment on noise reduction through post processing; however I hear the 40D and 50D have similar noise characteristics and ISO 3200 on my 40D is somewhat un-splendid... have to agree with the downsampling argument though; although it does add another step during post processing.Since I can now produce "noiseless" pics at 1600 ISO, noise is something I no longer worry about, and from what I have seen of the 50D, noise will be even less even at 3200 ISO.
And since I don't produce huge prints for magazines then the greater reduction in picture size because of the larger MP will reduce noise by approx the same amount.
Yeah, that's fair. To be honest much as I thought I'd love spot metering when I upgraded, it usually gets left in favour of one of the evaluative modes...In fact the 350D has 2 modes for centre metering, centre-weighted average metering and partial metering which covers about 9% at the centre.
It was partial metering which I mistakenly called spot metering - however in my defence the area is so small I have found that it is almost the same as spot for any practical purposes.
Well I can certainly state that 5 is correct - I have just tried and counted.
Perhaps 4 years ago that was correct when CF cards were slower, I now use a 4GB Peak card which I have had for about 18 months, and 5 is achieved, falling to 4 if I take another series staright away.
Allow a few seconds then I get 5fps again.
CF card speed has absolutely nothing to do with fps when the camera is using its own internal buffer.