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Canon...use it once, then dispose of it! (I keed, I keed!). Ya know, USED cameras are a good way to save some money....let some other sap pay for the high-priced NEW camera, have HIM take the depreciation, and then you can swoop in and get a great deal. Same thing on lenses--I buy USED lenses 90% OF THE TIME. Nikon USA lenses come with a 5-year warranty, but I have only had ONE, single Nikkor lens conk out on me since 1982. As far as buying a used camera: RIGHT NOW, and I mean right NOW, the market is flooded with used Canon and Nikon bodies and lenses. Why??? A few reasons, named Canon 5D-III, NIkon D800 and D800e, and Nikon D7000. People are trading in or consignment selling TONS of gear to be able to step up to the new super-popular "enthusiast" cameras. Owners of older enthusiast models are trading "up"--AND, and this is the secondary bonus--right NOW is the premier period for the Canon 1Dx and the Nikon D4, so there are plenty of slightly-used "pro glass" deals out there...lenses that fetch $800-$1200 on the used market and were $1299-$1699 when new...being sold off to finance "the next best thing" for people who are always looking for "the next best thing". Canon 24-70, Nikon 28-70 AFS, Canon 16-35-L, Nikon 85/1.4 AF-D, 70-200 VR or IS-L USM older Mark I model lenses...that kind of just "one baby step behind" pro glass..it's being dumped to raise cash!
From this sentence, I'm not sure you know that dSLR is not a generic name for a camera (vs. compact cameras, point&shoot, bridge cameras). It's a specific kind, and always allows to set aperture and shutter speed, permits changing lenses, look through a real viewfinder where you see what is seen by the lens, etc. While AF comes handy often, not only time to time. Manual focus, in particular if your budget is tight, is feasible but often not easy due to the dark and small viewfinder of entry-level dSLR.Thanks for all the info.
I am looking for a DSLR that will work like a standard film SLR maybe with some extra bells and whistles like Auto Focus that may come in handy from time to time. But I want to be able to set the aperture, shutter speed and get that precision focus. I know I want something that permits changing lenses. Even though I will likely not be buying any fancy lenses until I get familiar with the camera. I am not worried about flash equipment at this time. I prefer not to use a flash when I can help it.
I actually went out and looked at cameras this past weekend. There was an inexpensive Panasonic I played with but I seriously hated it. It had the adjustable everything but it didn't seem like it worked as you would expect it to. By which I mean a 400 ISO should have been adequate for indoor but even when I adjusted it to 1000 the images were still far too dark.
Just as I wouldn't buy a pair of shoes that were too small or a car that I couldn't get out of the parking lot. That is just being sensible. And while I may not instantly pick it up and handle it like a pro I can promise you I am going to learn.
What does "inexpensive" mean? 100$? not a dSLR. 400$: bridge, or maybe mirrorless.
Well, it is possible to get an entry-level DSLR for ~$400 if you buy one of the bundles and sell all the lenses that come with it.
Well, it is possible to get an entry-level DSLR for ~$400 if you buy one of the bundles and sell all the lenses that come with it.
It was a totally different issue: as far as I know, there aren't current Panasonic DSLR cameras. So the OP was not looking at a dSLR (and thus criticising something that is not a dSLR).