you have mis-understood.
to make up, help me ask your friends whether they are looking for a D90 or not
Your pricing not attractive leh...
you have mis-understood.
to make up, help me ask your friends whether they are looking for a D90 or not
Your pricing not attractive leh...
If you can't find a buyer easily by posting on CS' personal classifieds, I can only assume that you are asking for too much $$.
Hello, excuse me.
Based on a standard market depreciation value of 20% per year.
and the current selling price for D90 kit at $1450, my set is a whopping 20% off and I don't think selling @$1150 is unreasonable.
parky said:Hello, excuse me.
Based on a standard market depreciation value of 20% per year.
and the current selling price for D90 kit at $1450, my set is a whopping 20% off and I don't think selling @$1150 is unreasonable.
I really feel like laughing. Whether your asking price is unreasonable or not is not for me or you to decide.
You state an asking price, nobody contact you. Doesn't that say something?
I advise if you wan to laugh, just LOL. otherwise you might suffer internal injuries. Besides, if I can't sell something, just take it as I have not met the right buyer, not the problem with the price, cos I am 100% sure that is the market value.
huh? Where does it say that?Question... read in the manual (yes, I do go back once in a while) that by setting +1 EV brings the D90's ISO 200 down to 100 (equivalent)... What is the difference between doing that and force setting it down to Lo1.0? It is basically doing the same thing, or not?
huh? Where does it say that?
sounds wrong.
Assuming you are at ISO200 and EV 0 and some automated exposure mode like A or P:What I'm asking is... is setting +1.0 EV using the EV button on top right the same as setting Lo1.0 in the menu? Does D90 process this two exactly the same, or different?
Assuming you are at ISO200 and EV 0 and some automated exposure mode like A or P:
If you switch to EV +1, the photo should come out with higher exposure level.
If you switch to ISO Lo1.0, the photo should come out with same exposure level, since the camera will compensate for this.
so... end result is different...
It's something to do with ISOLo1.0 not being an actual ISO setting, but rather the camera doing some processing behind the scenes.So does both settings (menu versus EV button) equate to roughly the same exposure level equivalent to ISO100? Or must we treat setting EV button differently from actually setting the ISO sensitivity in the menu? Otherwise, why would the manual equate 1.0EV to ISO100 (derived meaning of course)...
It's something to do with ISOLo1.0 not being an actual ISO setting, but rather the camera doing some processing behind the scenes.
For example, if I use M mode and ISO200, f/3.5, 1/60s
then switch to
ISOLo1.0, f/3.5, 1/60s
effectively (based on my understanding) the camera is still capturing at ISO200, then processing it with deliberate underexposure. Kind of what we do in PP by pulling down the curves. This effectively makes the photo darker (the intention), but reduces the dynamic range, which is what DPReview concludes.
if in M mode, setting EV+1 doesn't do anything aside from moving the meter reading.So... if we set +1 EV from the EV button... is basically the same thing right? Processing by pulling down the curves?
Trying to solidify my EV concepts right, here...
as far as I know, you can't do anything to "re-create" a true ISO100 on the D90... :dunno:I know the purpose of EV button isn't the same..it is to compensative - to overexpose or underexpose a bit more... I'm just wondering if one can use this setting as a means to force it down to ISO100...of course, we need to tweak the shutter speed to a slower value...