L Larry Senior Member Mar 26, 2003 #42 Originally posted by Simon Kodak 14N is in Stock now. Click to expand... from AP? what's the pricetag?
Originally posted by Simon Kodak 14N is in Stock now. Click to expand... from AP? what's the pricetag?
ivor Senior Member Mar 26, 2003 #44 In the opinion of some of the experts here - CS.. is it worth to get it...??
megaweb Moderator Staff member Mar 26, 2003 #45 Originally posted by ivor In the opinion of some of the experts here - CS.. is it worth to get it...?? Click to expand... you can read the review here http://www.imaging-resource.com/PRODS/14N/14NA.HTM summarise the pro and con : Pro: Fantastic resolution Full-frame sensor permits true wide angle D-SLR photography Excellent color Very good tonality Excellent highlight headroom in DCR RAW files ERI (Extend Range Imaging) JPEG format combines power of RAW files with compatibility of JPEG Dual-card (CF and SD) supports flexible workflows Simultaneous dual-mode (RAW/JPEG) file recording is a nice touch Compatibility with Nikon lenses is a plus Fully field-upgradeable firmware is a big plus Much lower cost than the competition (Canon EOS-1Ds) All-magnesium alloy frame should be very rugged Con: Noisy sensor forces tradeoff of low-contrast subject detail Lack of antialiasing filter results in artifacts and color aliasing Poor high-ISO performance Poor long-exposure performance Too-short buffer length (max 7 frames, only 4 in JPEG mode) Slow buffer-empty times Short battery life 0.5 EV exposure steps are too coarse Unsophisticated AF system Despite magnesium frame, camera feels more prosumer than pro.
Originally posted by ivor In the opinion of some of the experts here - CS.. is it worth to get it...?? Click to expand... you can read the review here http://www.imaging-resource.com/PRODS/14N/14NA.HTM summarise the pro and con : Pro: Fantastic resolution Full-frame sensor permits true wide angle D-SLR photography Excellent color Very good tonality Excellent highlight headroom in DCR RAW files ERI (Extend Range Imaging) JPEG format combines power of RAW files with compatibility of JPEG Dual-card (CF and SD) supports flexible workflows Simultaneous dual-mode (RAW/JPEG) file recording is a nice touch Compatibility with Nikon lenses is a plus Fully field-upgradeable firmware is a big plus Much lower cost than the competition (Canon EOS-1Ds) All-magnesium alloy frame should be very rugged Con: Noisy sensor forces tradeoff of low-contrast subject detail Lack of antialiasing filter results in artifacts and color aliasing Poor high-ISO performance Poor long-exposure performance Too-short buffer length (max 7 frames, only 4 in JPEG mode) Slow buffer-empty times Short battery life 0.5 EV exposure steps are too coarse Unsophisticated AF system Despite magnesium frame, camera feels more prosumer than pro.