Cheap prime recomendation


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sheesh, why didn't I bother to look this up in the first place.

The 7 has a .8X viewfinder magnification with built-in diopter adjustment & 92% X 94% coverage. Not bad.
 

Originally posted by Nightshade
The 7 has a .8X viewfinder magnification with built-in diopter adjustment & 92% X 94% coverage. Not bad.
Not bad only? You'll be hard pressed to find another AF camera like it. :)

Change the focusing screen to 'M' or the 'ML' and the Dynax 7 becomes a capable MF camera! :D (The lens matters too, of course.)

And for the lens, the 50/1.7 is the cheapest lens, zoom or otherwise. If you try it and like it, instead of buying another lens to complement it, I have an alternative advice: sell it and get the 35/2 lens (S$500).

(The question is, why not get the 35/2 directly? If you are not confident prime lenses are good, S$175 is a smaller risk.)
 

Originally posted by Nightshade
sheesh, why didn't I bother to look this up in the first place.

The 7 has a .8X viewfinder magnification with built-in diopter adjustment & 92% X 94% coverage. Not bad.

Yupe those are the numbers......... Dynax 7 supposed to have one of the best and brightest viewfinders around... according to most of the reviews around......... but I guess it is also highly dependent on the lens....... my Tamron 24-135 SP f/3.5-5.6 is much darker than the Sigma 17-35 EX f/2.4-3.5....... the difference very obvious......... but my 505si is of course worse lar....... much darker and the view is much smaller......... but I haven't had a chance to try other non-Minolta brands before so that the viewfinder of the Dynax 7 is one of the best is what i read lar........ one of the push fators in choosing it also lar...... my eyesight quite teruk lar.....
 

regarding my "not bad" comment:

hehehehe, I am a very avid fan of the Maxxum/Dynax 7. It's my primary body. I don't find myself shooting 50mm often, but when I do macro work I put about 65mm of extension tubes on my 50 1.4 and get excellent results. (well, quality wise. sometimes my pictures suck.)

I'm so spoiled. I love that viewfinder. If I ever have to switch bodies, it is going to suck. : D
 

Originally posted by Nightshade
regarding my "not bad" comment:

hehehehe, I am a very avid fan of the Maxxum/Dynax 7. It's my primary body. I don't find myself shooting 50mm often, but when I do macro work I put about 65mm of extension tubes on my 50 1.4 and get excellent results. (well, quality wise. sometimes my pictures suck.)

I'm so spoiled. I love that viewfinder. If I ever have to switch bodies, it is going to suck. : D

Urrm.. sorry but I am totally new to extension tubes. So u might care to explain what adding extension tubes does for your 50mm? Extend the focal length? Do u add them between the lens and body? What's the trade-off? Do u buy them? And do they come in fixed lengths, for fixed purposes or what? Thanks!
 

Look a lens. Focus it to infinity and watch the front element. See how it moves towards you? Then focus it as close as it possibly can -- see how it moves away? What if you wanted to focus very, very close? One would simply move the front element farther forward.

Macro lenses (True 1:1, not this 1:4 crap) are very long for 50mm.

Extension tubes are a poor man's solution, but they produce very good results. They're like a teleconverter, in that they snap in between the body and the lens, but there is no glass inside them -- they simply move the lens farther from the body, allowing me to acheive greater than 1:1 results (the image on the slide is actually larger than the subject in real life)
 

and to answer the rest of your questions, you can buy them. Most people charge too much, but I got a 12mm, 25mm, and a 32mm for $25 US as a package.

The trade off? Lets in tons less light, and they only work really well at f/22. They come in fixed lenghts. You put them in any combination you wish.
 

Originally posted by Nightshade
and to answer the rest of your questions, you can buy them. Most people charge too much, but I got a 12mm, 25mm, and a 32mm for $25 US as a package.

The trade off? Lets in tons less light, and they only work really well at f/22. They come in fixed lenghts. You put them in any combination you wish.

Hey thanks! That was a great help. What u mean works only at f/22? Why?
 

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