Well they tell you not to, and I've tried a couple of pans, which should
have come out in my opinion, which looked somewhat double exposed...
Paul Stenquist wrote:
I pan with the K7. No problems:
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2009/08/17/automobiles/collectibles/0817-woodward_8.html
I also pan with the K20D with SR turned on. It doesn't cause any
problems. The sweeping motion of a pan is far outside the range of
motion that SR tries to control.
Paul
On Aug 27, 2009, at 10:00 AM, P. J. Alling wrote:
It's funny, I hadn't had a camera with SR until I got the K20D, so I
didn't notice the removal of the SR switch in the Pictures of the K-7.
The SR switch is a shooting control. Maybe not as important as manual
control of the focus point, but until Pentax comes up with an SR
system that's smart enough to know when the photographer is panning,
turning it off at a moments notice will be a necessity .
Removing the switch and making it a small production to turn SR on
and off shows what I think is a "Point and Shoot" design mentality
the same thing that resulted in the focus control debacle, This type
of mentality doesn't belong in the design of a relatively high end
camera, hell, it doesn't belong in the design of Point an Shoot camera.
Unlike the focus point issue it looks like it's not an easy a fix,
what with the hardware switch being gone and all...
Boris Liberman wrote:
Here goes;
http://pentax-ways.blogspot.com/2009/08/pentax-k-7-review-part-2.html
Be brutal and honest.
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drinking; he can ruin himself with gambling. If he does he is certainly a damn
fool, and he might possibly be a damned soul; but if he may not, he is not a
free man any more than a dog.
--G. K. Chesterton
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