I did find it a little odd having the control wheels the other way round on the Nikon, but after an hour or so it was beginning to sink in. Doh!
I use the 5D and 1DsII at the moment so I'm used to having different cameras with different controls in my hand and I don't know if that made it a little easier. I didn't play around too much with the settings on Simon's (He'd be doing a factory reset this morning otherwise!) But did make good use of aperture, shutter, ISO of course and WB and drive controls. Those are the ones I'd be using most of the time.
I other gorgeous thing is that if I find I struggle with the shutter/aperture being the other way round, I can always just reassign them! Think I'd probably just stick with it and see how I get on though. Basically just live with the thing in my hand till I get used to it.
I did have a good look at the files yesterday and there were a few really impressive ones, not in terms of my inate ability to see a shot but in terms of technical performance. I took one of Simon in exactly the kind of location I would put a Bride and shooting on manual I made my guess at the exposure. Dialled that in and it was absolutely spot on. When I looked at the raw file the highlights were perfect and there was still detail in the shadows. Printed that one at A3+ just as a check since it's a bit fewer MP and it's got all the quality I need. Pixel peeping I'm up at 160%+ before I'm starting to see any real degradation. That's very similar to my 1DsII.
The other ones that really impressed me were a shot of some grass with a dead tree in the background in the fog. There was some decent light on this straggly grass though. On the 24-70 I didn't do anything other than my normal sharpening action on it and printed it at A4. Showed my other half and the comment was "Blimey, that's sharp!"
Then there was the "Dark test" Under a canopy so there is only light from one side and it's really dark in there. Tried the 5D against the D700 (Bit unfair I know but that's my current kit so I wanted to see how much improvement I could expect) The 5D ran out of ISO. Shot at ISO3200 and still had to pull the exposure by a stop to get anything even remotely worth while. Used exactly the same settings on the Nikon, pulled the file a stop and it looked like someone had switched a light on! There were still two stops to go on the Nikon too. I was more interested in the quality at 3200 though, that's more real world for me and running both files through Dfine noise reduction there was no doubt the D700 produced a cleaner if warmer file. That was an interesting exercise, the Canon produced a much cooler image and the Nikon was warmer.
Thanks to Simon for the test drive, most impressed.
