Gosh, that's great that you're a first-time buyer who wishes to spend less than $1,000 for a low-light d-slr,not for family gatherings or kids' soccer practices, but instead one for low light nighttime, stars/moon/rainy/snowy weather,indoor,landscapes,some portraits and light painting, for a photographer who doesn't like to use flash and who prefers to focus manually most of the time,and who is not a victim of the megapixel marketing and who tends to use his photos for drawing references,and who therefore often crops and zooms his photos for composition. After a month of armchair researching, perhaps you could skim through the past three weeks' worth of posts, where there are ample threads, begun by posters exactly like you, with approximately the same budget as you, by people whose desires aren't perhaps as noble as yours (they often hope to shoot kids' soccer games and those awful family gatherings), but who also want to spend about the same amount of money,and who have also done about a month;s worth of armchair research and are considering the Canon T1i, the Nikon D5000, and the Pentax K200D, since all three of those cameras appeal to people who are the target market for inexpensive d-slr bodies with affordable lenses for people who have finally reached the limits of a digital point and shoot and who want a great camera that offers ample user control. You're welcome for asking this question for the 1,056th time,and I hope you can find what you're looking for from one of the three manufacturers who have each spent hundreds upon hundreds of hours studying the needs, budgets,and aspirations of photographers like yourself. I think that Canon, Nikon, or Pentax will have something pretty close to what you need. I would suggest the Canon T1I, or the Nikon D5000, or the Pentax K200D might be exactly what a person like you needs and wants.
Goodbye to this forum and your awful moustache.
Also bare in mind that a lot of the older dSLRs have noteworthy pixel die out during long exposures that you will have to find and remove from the final image manually.
Also bare in mind that a lot of the older dSLRs have noteworthy pixel die out during long exposures that you will have to find and remove from the final image manually.
True. I heard this happening on D50's and some D80's. . .dunno about the prevalence of such on newer models since I really don't do any of that nighttime stuff. One or two pixels I could handle (over a year or so) - several at once; yea not so good.
Thanks for the backup! I did search the archives, but didn't find the specific info I was looking for.
Do either of you (but not moustache guy, unless you all have them, in which case I mean not the Moustache Guy... I'd rather not hear from him) have an opinion on the recent Pentax DSLRs- K200D, K20D, etc.? I'm pretty sure they both offer what I'm looking for, it's just that I don't know anyone that's owned one. That might say something, though...
Also, both the K200D & the K20D have CCD sensors (which supposedly create less noise)- is that more desirable over CMOS?
I'm not looking for a camera dedicated solely to night sky photography, I live in the city so it's never 100% dark outside. I guess I want what all of us noobs want- a pro camera without paying for it!![]()
Thanks for the backup! I did search the archives, but didn't find the specific info I was looking for.
Do either of you (but not moustache guy, unless you all have them, in which case I mean not the Moustache Guy... I'd rather not hear from him) have an opinion on the recent Pentax DSLRs- K200D, K20D, etc.? I'm pretty sure they both offer what I'm looking for, it's just that I don't know anyone that's owned one. That might say something, though...
Also, both the K200D & the K20D have CCD sensors (which supposedly create less noise)- is that more desirable over CMOS?
I'm not looking for a camera dedicated solely to night sky photography, I live in the city so it's never 100% dark outside. I guess I want what all of us noobs want- a pro camera without paying for it!![]()
Thanks for the backup! I did search the archives, but didn't find the specific info I was looking for.
Do either of you (but not moustache guy, unless you all have them, in which case I mean not the Moustache Guy... I'd rather not hear from him) have an opinion on the recent Pentax DSLRs- K200D, K20D, etc.? I'm pretty sure they both offer what I'm looking for, it's just that I don't know anyone that's owned one. That might say something, though...
Also, both the K200D & the K20D have CCD sensors (which supposedly create less noise)- is that more desirable over CMOS?
I'm not looking for a camera dedicated solely to night sky photography, I live in the city so it's never 100% dark outside. I guess I want what all of us noobs want- a pro camera without paying for it!![]()
Hate to break it to you but that mustache guy is very knowledgeable with just about every camera system there is.
But...But I has a moustache