What's new

VOTE AND RATE:DSLR'S

Which brand and model you prefer the most?(multiple choice is fine)


  • Total voters
    144

bobbyknight

TPF Noob!
Joined
Jan 15, 2011
Messages
165
Reaction score
0
Location
Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Can others edit my Photos
Photos OK to edit
When it comes to the quality of the picture, video, durability(weatherproof), features and over all performance of the camera. You can post your opinions and point of views if you feel the need. Thank you.

Planning to buy one so this would greatly help for me to decide, thankies
:wink:
 
Last edited:
Thanks for letting us do that bobby, its really appreciated.
 
When it comes to the quality of the picture, video, durability(weatherproof), features and over all performance of the camera. You can post your opinions and point of views if you feel the need. Thank you.

There are dozens of websites out there dedicated to this specific question.

Let me google that for you
 
oh no ......
I better subscribe to this thread. ;)

(microwave the popcorn in the mean time)
 
Screw drama, answer the question or skip the thread - easy enough to do and takes less time than posting 'Google it'.

I chose Nikon and the D7000, based on my experience and value for the dollar. The D7000 has had a lot of hype lately and it's well deserved. The camera is constantly compared to pro bodies twice it's cost and fares very well against them.

I couldn't be happier with my decision.
 
Screw drama, answer the question or skip the thread - easy enough to do and takes less time than posting 'Google it'.

I chose Nikon and the D7000, based on my experience and value for the dollar. The D7000 has had a lot of hype lately and it's well deserved. The camera is constantly compared to pro bodies twice it's cost and fares very well against them.

I couldn't be happier with my decision.



Two thumbs way up!:mrgreen:
 
Screw drama, answer the question or skip the thread - easy enough to do and takes less time than posting 'Google it'.

I chose Nikon and the D7000, based on my experience and value for the dollar. The D7000 has had a lot of hype lately and it's well deserved. The camera is constantly compared to pro bodies twice it's cost and fares very well against them.

I couldn't be happier with my decision.

:thumbup:
I still cant believe how powerfull that camera is for the price.
 
Your poll allows multiple choice. ;)
 
I honestly and seriously voted for all of them.

These days, it is hard to find a camera that sucks for image quality. Even entry level cameras like the D3100 or the 550D offer amazing quality. Upping to a higher level camera (60D, 7D, D7000, D300) gives you more bells and whistles, better construction, better high ISO. But they come at a price.

Don't fret about what body to buy. Seriously. They are all highly capable. The body is the third most important thing in terms of what you bring with you when you shoot. #2 being your lenses. #1 being your knowledge.

We all get tied into what body to buy when we shouldnt. Think of your budget, allocate money for lenses, and then head to a store and hold them to check out ergonomics.

Shooting my 7D with an 18-55 kit lens and shooting my 7D with a 50 1.4 or a 70-200 2.8IS makes it a totally different camera.
 
When it comes to the quality of the picture, video, durability(weatherproof), features and over all performance of the camera. You can post your opinions and point of views if you feel the need. Thank you.

Planning to buy one so this would greatly help for me to decide, thankies
:wink:

The points you raise are in need of a context to put them into otherwise the only answer you'll get is that the one that offers the best in all areas is going to be the most expensive on the list (and most likely a battle between teh canon and the nikon at the top end of each scale).

You've got to first outline your interest areas first - what are your needs from a DSLR; what subjects are you going to work with; what environments; what kind of shots to you want to produce; what your overall max budget is for starting out etc....

Once you have criteria on the table you can then start to make choices and compare the cameras on a scale best suited to yourself. Without doing this you'll just get lots of answers - a filled up poll and be none the wiser for it.
 
I honestly and seriously voted for all of them.

These days, it is hard to find a camera that sucks for image quality. Even entry level cameras like the D3100 or the 550D offer amazing quality. Upping to a higher level camera (60D, 7D, D7000, D300) gives you more bells and whistles, better construction, better high ISO. But they come at a price.

Don't fret about what body to buy. Seriously. They are all highly capable. The body is the third most important thing in terms of what you bring with you when you shoot. #2 being your lenses. #1 being your knowledge.

We all get tied into what body to buy when we shouldnt. Think of your budget, allocate money for lenses, and then head to a store and hold them to check out ergonomics.

Shooting my 7D with an 18-55 kit lens and shooting my 7D with a 50 1.4 or a 70-200 2.8IS makes it a totally different camera.


If you opt between 550D and 60D then I think it's better to go for 60D since it's only a lil difference with the price but you'll get more out of it.
Durability is also very important to me and I can get it starting from 60D am I right?
 
Screw drama, answer the question or skip the thread - easy enough to do and takes less time than posting 'Google it'.

I chose Nikon and the D7000, based on my experience and value for the dollar. The D7000 has had a lot of hype lately and it's well deserved. The camera is constantly compared to pro bodies twice it's cost and fares very well against them.

I couldn't be happier with my decision.

You may not know, the original post from OP was just two lines of words without any camera models. No poll, just ask what is the best camera. The camera models and poll was added later.
 
When it comes to the quality of the picture, video, durability(weatherproof), features and over all performance of the camera. You can post your opinions and point of views if you feel the need. Thank you.

Planning to buy one so this would greatly help for me to decide, thankies
:wink:

The points you raise are in need of a context to put them into otherwise the only answer you'll get is that the one that offers the best in all areas is going to be the most expensive on the list (and most likely a battle between teh canon and the nikon at the top end of each scale).

You've got to first outline your interest areas first - what are your needs from a DSLR; what subjects are you going to work with; what environments; what kind of shots to you want to produce; what your overall max budget is for starting out etc....

Once you have criteria on the table you can then start to make choices and compare the cameras on a scale best suited to yourself. Without doing this you'll just get lots of answers - a filled up poll and be none the wiser for it.


Hmm.. Yeah you got a point there xD
Typically, I'm going to use it for everything.
Consider it as a hobby only, but I'd want it for the best.
Maybe a 60D or D7000. xD
I also like 7D but the price is a bit higher for a beginner like myself, you think so?
 
Having Nikon lenses narrowed it down for me quite a bit. So when I upgraded from the D70s it was an easy choice to go to the D7000.
 

Most reactions

New Topics

Back
Top Bottom