Let's use the F1 analogy.
Thought this thread has died already.
I don't think using F1 as analogy is appropriate. Racing deals with one quantifiable objective that is time.
i.e. You don't win with style, you win with time.
Photography, on the other hand deals with the "unquantifiable" that is art. While there are generally accepted guide lines to what constitute a good picture to human eyes, these are however, not absolute. I think that's what makes photography as an art form so interesting.
i.e Rules of third are just that, a rule not a must.
Culinary, on the other hand, shares similar traits to photography and if we are using this as an analogy, the parallels are more obvious:
1a) Most people can cook. Even if one cannot cook a packet of instant noodles for his life, he or she can at least spread a slice of bread.
1b) Most people can click a shutter and take a picture. Even if they don't have any idea as to what is going on inside the camera.
2a) Most internationally acclaimed chefs should have at his or her disposal, the best equipments.
i.e stove, knifes, ovens
et al.
2b) Most internationally acclaimed professional photographers have a gear list that reads like my wife worst nightmare. (though that is another topic for another day)
3a) Good chefs will go out of his or her way to source and use the most appropriate and best ingredients as it is possible and available.
3b) Good photographers will wait forever for that most appropriate and best subject matter as it is possible and available.
4a) Good chefs know that food and its presentation plays equal parts in seducing a gastronomer's palate.
4b) Ansel Adams knew that post processing and its presentation were equally as important.
The only time when choice of equipment comes into play is when certain type of jobs require certain type of tools. One can't cook a 200 pounds tuna with my instant noodle pot, just like one can't capture the details of a spider's eyes without a macro lens. Which brings me back to point 3 -- Ingredients, or in photography terminology, Subjects. Selecting and studying your subject, IMHO, is way more crucial than selecting your next camera body.
Continue with this analogy for a bit. All things being equal, will a Michelin 3 Star chef frying a sunny side up in his fancy kitchen, along with my grease fearing wife frying a similar egg in our no frills kitchen, yield similar result?
Now switch the constant, the chef in my kitchen and my wife in his, will the result still be consistent with the first scenario?
I believe that the result will constant, that the chef should make a better sunny side up than my wife. The only variable here is the skill of the chef and not the fancy gear that was used.
Ergo, a good photographer taking a picture of the same subject in similar condition should be able to create art and not some snapshots, regardless of the equipment used.
That eye for details, the knowledge of which angle to dissect your subject matter, the experience and understanding of how lights and shadows tango in their spectrum are not something that can be bought off the catalog of Canon.
Apologize for this long winded post and bravo to all those who managed to read through my endless ranting and poor grammar. I have to write all these down and post it on this forum to convince myself that I don't really need a Canon 7D! :bsmilie: