ellaalmeda
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I am planning to buy my first DSLR, which is better for a beginner, 1100D or 3100? Thanks
ellaalmeda said:I am planning to buy my first DSLR, which is better for a beginner, 1100D or 3100? Thanks![]()
Nuffles said:Nikon are yet to update their excellent 35mm f/2, and 85mm f/1.8 lenses too - both excellent lengths on both crop and full frame - meaning neither will AF on cheaper bodies. It's a shame.
They do have the superb 35mm f/1.8G AF-S DX though. And while their 50mm AF-S is more expensive, it is better built than the canon 50/1.8 with a proper manual focus ring and silent wave AF-S. Not quite the same value for money as the cheap 50/1.8D but you do get more for the extra you pay.
As far as I can see, the only lenses that don't have some sort of AF-s substitute is the 85/1.8 and the 80-400 VR, and for the 80-400 you could get a sigma zoom for less money anyway.
So that just leaves the 85/1.8D, which is a shame but that's a lot less of a loss than " only work with some lenses" makes it sound![]()

Hi,
They're both very similar and will do similar things. Have you had a go with either, if not then I'd strongly recommend you do. You need to see which you prefer, which feels nicer in your hands, which menu system do you prefer, etc
Good luck with your new camera, whichever you choose, you won't be disappointed.
That's all the advice that is needed, for a beginner all the stuff about the D3100 needing AF-S lenses is immaterial - the 50mm f/1.8 is not the holy grail of lenses and any other lens that a beginner is likely to buy will have a motor...
I'm not trying to bash Canon but on Nikon camera, you can use almost all the nikon lenses, of cause lens like Af-D on a budget body will manual focus only but in general all lens except pre AI lens will work on all nikon DSLR system.
For Canon pro range you can't use all the lens so it require you to buy new expensive lens.
Sure the DX lens won't work on Nikon full frame camera but you can always use the crop mode on your FX camera to work with the lens, is not meant to be use that way but it works.
But on canon you can get adaptors to use a huge range of older glass, a lot of which can't be adapted to nikon.
But on canon you can get adaptors to use a huge range of older glass, a lot of which can't be adapted to nikon.
so you can't adapt old canon glass to fit the f mount. I'm not sure how thats relevant to the Canon v Nikon debate?
If you talking about getting adapters then nikon can mount pretty much any lens .........
what i try to point out is old nikon glass does not need any adapters, they just mount straight on ........ except Nikon pre AI glass.
All other manual glass require adapter to use on the nikon system anyway, just like any other camera.
Find which suits you and if you have friends into photography, I would lean towards what they have, borrowing lenses, tips etc.
Hi,
They're both very similar and will do similar things. Have you had a go with either, if not then I'd strongly recommend you do. You need to see which you prefer, which feels nicer in your hands, which menu system do you prefer, etc
Good luck with your new camera, whichever you choose, you won't be disappointed.
Let's say it again. This is the best advice on this thread.
When I bought my first DSLR I tried out the comparable Canon and Nikon models in a shop. Although I'd never owned any equipment from either manufacturer before, I found that the Canon did everything the way I intuitively expected it to and the Nikon was bizarrely unintuitive. Even down to little things like the position of the main aperture/shutter dial - Canon's is right (for me) and Nikon's is wrong (for me).
BUT - and this is the KEY point - I know people who made exactly the same comparison and reached exactly the opposite conclusion! It's a very personal thing.
Your first DSLR is unlikely to be your last, and as they acquire lenses, flashes etc most people tend upgrade within the same system rather than switching. So the choice of system matters. Don't worry too much about whether one camera has more features than another, because in 5 years time all that will have changed anyway. But do pay attention to the ergonomics, layout, menu design etc. because these things are baked into the manufacturers' DNA and will persist for many generations of equipment.