Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-13 Thread Mike Ignatiev
i don't know much about *cAmpatibility* (i suppose 
that has something to do with camps and campari?), but 
the rest is BS, be it USA or not.

mishka

 I don't like all this whining on the
 list re non-A lenses.  If you haven't bought a new 
 lens since 1981, you are not keeping Pentax in 
 business anyway. No other company has campatibility 
 back to the mid-1980s like Pentax. And the *ist-D is 
 very competitive with any Canon SLR right now.

Robert James
USA



Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-13 Thread graywolf
I don't believe anybody here thinks you ought to buy an istD. Or any 
other camera. None are perfect, and obviously you will be unhappy with 
an imperfect cameras.

For the rest of us, we live in the real world where hardly anything is 
perfect and are glad when something meets most of our desires. As I have 
said before, I have come to the conclusion that the istD was not 
designed to work with older lenses. It is just a happy coincidence that 
they work at all.

And I feel that is OK, not many companies care about people who collect 
their antique equipment even as much as Pentax does.  One has to realize 
that if they cared they would still be providing parts and service for 
that equipment. Resenting it will not make a bit different, but it will 
make you very unhappy and the rest of us slightly unhappy because you 
are a nice guy and we are sad to see you tearing your heart out over a 
lost cause.

Me? I only wish I could afford the camera, but eventually the prices 
will be down where you don't have to be a member of the upper middle 
class to afford one like it.

Peter Alling wrote:
If I'm going to plunk down a couple Thousand dollars for a new body, I 
want one that works correctly
by my standards.
I don't want a company saying,  We know what you need, here it is, shut 
up and be happy.  If that's
what you're willing to put up with so be it.  It's not whining to demand 
what you want, it's consumerism.
If you don't complain no one will know you're not satisfied.


--
graywolf
http://graywolfphoto.com
You might as well accept people as they are,
you are not going to be able to change them anyway.



RE: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-10 Thread Paul Ewins

I've got the 30/2.8, 35/2, 40/2.8, 50/1.2, 85/2 and 100/2.8 along with
various 50's for which I have F versions. The 35/2 hurts a bit because I
bought that three months ago intending to use it as a normal. I've
basically decided that the 35/2, 50/1.2  85/2 will be the LX kit
while the 40 will live on one of the MXen. They will be film lenses
and the F  FA glass will be digital lenses. I may end up buying an
FA35/2 or wait to see what other DA glass turns up. I want primes not
zooms.

Paul Ewins
Melbourne, Australia  





Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-10 Thread Bill Owens
Not to worry, Robert.  Lots of people here whine about everything Pentax
does.

Bill

 Pentax has produced a fantastic digital camera, and at $1500 ($1700 some
places) US, is priced about right.  I don't like all this whining on the
list re non-A lenses.  If you haven't bought a new lens since 1981, you are
not keeping Pentax in business anyway.  No other company has campatibility
back to the mid-1980s like Pentax.  And the *ist-D is very competitive with
any Canon SLR right now.

 Robert James
 USA






Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-10 Thread Mark Roberts
William Robb [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

From: J. C. O'Connell 
 
 Many people have mentioned just using a hand held meter
 intead of TTL. That will work a lot of the time, but
 not with varible aperture zooms, and macro will also
 get tricky because of light loss at high mags. Ditto
 for filters and extension tubes and such...

Two words: 
Instant review.

And a third word: Histogram.

-- 
Mark Roberts
Photography and writing
www.robertstech.com



Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-10 Thread Jostein
- Original Message - 
From: J. C. O'Connell [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, October 10, 2003 6:36 AM
Subject: RE: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses


 Not as fast as AE with auto exposure bracketing.
 If you have the time, fine, but if you dont,
 your outta luck

'scuse me, but I think this argument is basically deteriorating into a your
technique with a new camera isn't half as good as mine with an old camera I
know well.

Sure.

JCO, if you don't want to buy a digicam, it's ok.

enjoy.

Jostein



Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-10 Thread Chris Brogden

 On 9 Oct 2003 at 21:47, William Robb wrote:

  You can't make it a black and white issue.

Agreed.  I'd say that people who only use MF lenses and who have no
intention of buying AF lenses don't really have any economic clout when
they complain that new bodies won't support their 25 year old lenses.  On
the flip side, though (since I bemoaned the loss of full K/M
compatibility), there are a couple of arguments to be made for keeping
compatibility.

If someone buys a DSLR intending to use their MF lenses, there's always
the chance that they'll wind up buying Pentax AF lenses to take better
advantage of the camera's abilities.  Also, by removing full
compatibility, Pentax has removed any reason for an MF customer to stick
with Pentax when they move up to an AF SLR, either film or digital.

I consider myself a pretty loyal Pentax MF user, but I've bought my share
of stuff new from Pentax, including an MZ-5n, FA28-70, FA80-320, and a
67II.  I sold my AF stuff, as I prefer to use 35mm MF and MedF when
possible.  When I go AF again, it will very likely be with Canon or Nikon
(probably Canon) because I feel that they have much better AF systems.
The only thing that would tie me to the Pentax AF system would be the
number and quality of lenses that I currently have for my MF system.  If I
can use them on a new Pentax AF body, that's a huge motivation to stay
with Pentax when I go AF.  If I can't, then all of a sudden Pentax doesn't
have an advantage over the other AF systems, and I'll go with a system
with better AF support (faster, quieter, more lenses, etc.).

If Pentax's upper-end AF system is not as good as Canon/Nikon's, then they
have to attract and keep customers by emphasizing other factors.  For me,
the excellent compatibility will play a part.  True, I'll probably never
buy an FA20-35 while I still have my M25-35, but at least I'll have bought
a Pentax AF SLR, which helps them out a bit.  If I go with C/N because
Pentax doesn't always fare so well on a level playing ground when
compatibility isn't an issue, then Pentax loses me as a customer
altogether.  I'd prefer to stay with Pentax glass because I love it, but
I'm using MedF more these days when I want good quality, and my LX is
becoming my ps system.

So yeah, one one hand it's pretty funny to see people who haven't bought a
new item from Pentax in 20 years whining about how the new DSLR won't
support their lenses.  OTOH, now there's no motivation for them to choose
Pentax over any other brand, as they'll have to rebuild a body/lens system
from scratch anyhow.

chris



Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-10 Thread Rob Studdert
On 10 Oct 2003 at 13:55, Rob Studdert wrote:

 On 9 Oct 2003 at 21:47, William Robb wrote:
 
  You can't make it a black and white issue.
 
 Exactly. It just shits me..

Oops. Sorry about that.



Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~distudio/publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998



Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-09 Thread RDJ92807
I have been testing the fantastic *ist-D with a variety of lenses.  So far, the Pentax 
80-200/2.8 FA and Pentax 200/4 FA Macro have been stunning.beautiful.  Tamron 
24-135 not bad.  Pentax 20-40/4 FA very good.  Tamron 80-200/2.8 superb (adaptall pk-a 
mount works just fine).

I believe the quality/resolution of the top Pentax  3rd party lenses goes well beyond 
what a 6mb sensor can display, from my tests so far.  I would like more people on the 
list to test the best Pentax and 3rd party lenses and give us feedback.

Pentax has produced a fantastic digital camera, and at $1500 ($1700 some places) US, 
is priced about right.  I don't like all this whining on the list re non-A lenses.  If 
you haven't bought a new lens since 1981, you are not keeping Pentax in business 
anyway.  No other company has campatibility back to the mid-1980s like Pentax.  And 
the *ist-D is very competitive with any Canon SLR right now.

Robert James
USA



Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-09 Thread alex wetmore
On Thu, 9 Oct 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Pentax has produced a fantastic digital camera, and at $1500 ($1700
 some places) US, is priced about right.  I don't like all this
 whining on the list re non-A lenses.  If you haven't bought a new
 lens since 1981, you are not keeping Pentax in business anyway.

You can buy lenses made since 1981 and still own older lenses and want
to use them.

My M lenses are the 40/2.8, 135/3.5, and 200/4.  None are
particularily expensive, but none of them get much use anyway (except
the 40/2.8, and I probably wouldn't care too much about using that on
the *ist D, the body is a little too big for such a tiny lens and the
A 24/2.8 that I own is a more useful prime normal lens for this
camera).  The 135/3.5 and 200/4 are lenses that I rarely use -- rarely
enough that I don't really want to replace them with FA or A
equivelents but often enough that I'd like to use them with metering.

I still bought the *ist D since I also own some nice A and FA lenses
(A 24/2.8, A 50/1.4, FA 50/1.7, FA 28-70/4, Tamron 90/2.5 with an A
adapter) and I look forward to buying the FAJ 16-45/4 when it comes
out.

I tend to prefer the A and M lenses because they have a better build
quality and feel better to me than the FA lenses (excluding the
limited lenses).  There are a lot of wonderful M primes on the used
market that would be nice to have the option of using on the *ist D.

alex



Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-09 Thread Rob Studdert
On 9 Oct 2003 at 22:56, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Pentax has produced a fantastic digital camera, and at $1500 ($1700 some places)
 US, is priced about right.  I don't like all this whining on the list re non-A
 lenses.  If you haven't bought a new lens since 1981, you are not keeping Pentax
 in business anyway.  No other company has campatibility back to the mid-1980s
 like Pentax.  And the *ist-D is very competitive with any Canon SLR right now.

So everyone whining hasn't spent good money on new Pentax glass recently?

Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~distudio/publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998



Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-09 Thread William Robb

- Original Message - 
From: Rob Studdert
Subject: Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses




 So everyone whining hasn't spent good money on new Pentax glass recently?

Yer Aussie dollars are no good here, Toots!

I bought a new lens a couple of years ago. First new one I bought since 1988
or so when I bought Pentax in the first place.
You can't make it a black and white issue.

William Robb



RE: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-09 Thread J. C. O'Connell
The new glass, like the new cameras arent as good as the
old ones in some ways. I prefer manual focus. They havent made any
lenses with as good manual focus feel as the K/M since the
K/M (20 years?).  Dont blame me, blame Pentax.

Secondly, if you had a dozen perfectly working nice K/M
lenses how happy would you be that they cant do AE or TTL metering
anymore for no good reason? They are basic K mount.
To not support the most basic of K functions is absurd...

Many people have mentioned just using a hand held meter
intead of TTL. That will work a lot of the time, but
not with varible aperture zooms, and macro will also
get tricky because of light loss at high mags. Ditto
for filters and extension tubes and such...

JCO

   J.C. O'Connell   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://jcoconnell.com


-Original Message-
From: Rob Studdert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2003 11:34 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses


On 9 Oct 2003 at 22:56, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Pentax has produced a fantastic digital camera, and at $1500 ($1700 some
places)
 US, is priced about right.  I don't like all this whining on the list re
non-A
 lenses.  If you haven't bought a new lens since 1981, you are not keeping
Pentax
 in business anyway.  No other company has campatibility back to the
mid-1980s
 like Pentax.  And the *ist-D is very competitive with any Canon SLR right
now.

So everyone whining hasn't spent good money on new Pentax glass recently?

Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~distudio/publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998



Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-09 Thread William Robb

- Original Message - 
From: J. C. O'Connell 

Subject: RE: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses



 
 Many people have mentioned just using a hand held meter
 intead of TTL. That will work a lot of the time, but
 not with varible aperture zooms, and macro will also
 get tricky because of light loss at high mags. Ditto
 for filters and extension tubes and such...

Two words: 
Instant review.

William Robb



Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-09 Thread Robert Gonzalez


William Robb wrote:
- Original Message - 
From: J. C. O'Connell 

Subject: RE: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses




Many people have mentioned just using a hand held meter
intead of TTL. That will work a lot of the time, but
not with varible aperture zooms, and macro will also
get tricky because of light loss at high mags. Ditto
for filters and extension tubes and such...


Two words: 
Instant review.

William Robb


Or count the stops from wide open after using the meter button.




RE: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses

2003-10-09 Thread J. C. O'Connell
Not as fast as AE with auto exposure bracketing.
If you have the time, fine, but if you dont,
your outta luck


   J.C. O'Connell   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://jcoconnell.com


-Original Message-
From: William Robb [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, October 10, 2003 12:06 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses



- Original Message -
From: J. C. O'Connell

Subject: RE: Fantastic *ist-D and Lenses




 Many people have mentioned just using a hand held meter
 intead of TTL. That will work a lot of the time, but
 not with varible aperture zooms, and macro will also
 get tricky because of light loss at high mags. Ditto
 for filters and extension tubes and such...

Two words:
Instant review.

William Robb