I am not surprised about the 28mm being your most used
lens. Its the classic "format diagonal" focal length
which is extremely versatile on any camera. I think
that with APS digital, a good 28mm prime lens is essential.
I still havent got around to trying my K28/2.0
yet, but if it's good on digital, its going to get a lot of usage
on APS I would think.
jco

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Bill Lawlor
Sent: Tuesday, February 20, 2007 3:43 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: 40 Gb with the K10D


I spent the month of January in India. I'm pleased to report the
following experiences with the K10D.

The K10D performed without a hitch other than those related to my
learning curve. I did not anticipate that the 28/2.8 F would be my most
used lens. The 43 Ltd. spent a lot of time in my bag because it was a
bit too long for use in the narrow warrens typical of the most
interesting  old indian cities. The 50-200 DA is superb. I used it a lot
at the camel fair/races and on the Ganges at Varanasi for four days. I
put a 52mm "normal" hood on it permanantly and left the factory hood at
home. The 18-55 kit lens got some use at the wide end and I only used
the 16mm Zenitar for a few shots on the Ganges. I should have saved the
weight and left it at home. I had a 50/1.7 M on the ZX-5 back up which
my partner ended up using. He used the Zenitar more than I did. Of
course I had my faithfull GR1 in pocket at all times. I shot 8 rolls of
Astia with the GR1 and got some nice shots due to the convenience of
that sweet camera. I left the K10D ISO at 100-400 except one night we
went out into the streets during a wild Shiva festival when I used
ISO1600 and the 28 on manual focus. I like the results.

The back-up PD70X and Wolverine 40 drives worked fine. The PD70X copied
a 2Gb card in 3 or 4 minutes. The wolverine was much slower. Every nite
I would back up the day's shots and format the cards for the next day. I
got 121 RAW DNG images per card. I lost two fast 2Gb cards somewhere but
the remaining two covered all my daily needs. Recharging the three
camera batteries and the hard drives took place about every three days.
I got a bunch of plug converters to match Indian  to USA plugs for about
25 cents each. Bob had a video camera to charge  so we usually had all
the plugs in a hotel room busy at times. I never missed a shot because
of low batteries. All the chargers were different but they all worked
from 100 to 250 volts so we didn't have to use heavy transformers with
the 220 volts at 50 cycles in India.

Bill Lawlor


www.wvlphotography.com



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