Fair point.
However, we both clearly have different requirements from our print output. I had to think very hard about whether I was prepared to accept the DOWNGRADE in quality to start using the D800 over medium format film and my Phase One back because I was sick of A) Processing costs, and B) the weight and awkwardness of using the PhaseOne system outside of the studio....
Personally, I totally accept the limitations of offset printing and the poor paper stock we use at my place. A great image will be just that - a great image, regardless of output - but I know that those great images will never 'sing' when printed on regular paper stock. All I can do at my end is provide files that are as good as they can be in terms of processing and size.
I can remember the move from film to the D60 - it wasn't pleasant, as the D60 was a pig of a camera... slow, clunky, lacking in refinement. The files were pants looking back on them but I quickly came to realise what digital could allow me to do in terms of efficiency and like you, the running costs were a world part in favour of digital. At the time I was still shooting on Bronicas and I could never fully settle on digital because of that massive gulf in quality between a MF neg or slide, and the digital file of a DSLR. I bit the bullet; got rid of the Bronicas and just accepted that digital was a way forward that would eventually pay off. Fast forward a few years and when I got a 40D, I knew 35mm film was a route I would never go back to and for what I shoot, I knew that MF just couldn't compete in terms of flexibility.
If I was studio-based and I knew clients required high, high quality output then I would maybe miss 5x4" and MF, but I've just adapted to working as I do. I can see where you're coming from - MF digital is still another world compared to standard consumer-grade DSLR but as you hint, the benefits of something like a D800 must offset that difference somewhat in terms of how you can work and what lenses (etc) you can use....
I still insist the D200 is a vastly superior camera for the money.
For the money, getting as close to modern level as possible, I agree.
OP - Apologies for taking this OT...
