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digital camera battery use
reply to all of the good people who answered my initial question: thank you thank you for your informative posts.! This morning I purchased a Sanyo Eneloop charger with 8 rechargeable batteries from Costco for about $25. On a different thread Eneloop was very highly recommended because the batteries do not lose their charge as others when not being used and come fully charged when purchased. Best, Aaron You won't be disappointed with these batteries. Read this thread : A further advantage in using the AA's is if you happen to not have your rechargeable at hand or ready you can always purchase a non rechargeable set of AA's in either alkaline or the non rechargeable version of a Lithium AA. Always consult your manual first before using AA alkaline's or AA Lithium's. Some cameras do not recommend their use. Most do. |
digital camera battery use
SMS ??? ? wrote:
edited for brevity No professional or prosumer digital SLRs use AA batteries, so I don't think any "important job" would have AA's anyway, unless someone is using AA trays in a vertical grip. Hello, Steven: You're wrong, sorry. The Pentax K100D, for example, can be considered a "prosumer digital SLR," and it's "burdened" by AA cells. In that case, the AA's are already in a tray and can be quickly swapped. though not easily recharged as you'd need two chargers or a six cell charger. I think that the only current production D-SLR that uses AA batteries is the Pentax K100D/K110D, which is a very entry-level model that no professional would ever use. Oh, c'mon...how are you so certain that, NO pro photographer employs such a Pentax DSLR? Cordially, John Turco |
digital camera battery use
On Nov 9, 8:17 pm, John Turco wrote:
In that case, the AA's are already in a tray and can be quickly swapped. though not easily recharged as you'd need two chargers or a six cell charger. I think that the only current production D-SLR that uses AA batteries is the Pentax K100D/K110D, which is a very entry-level model that no professional would ever use. Oh, c'mon...how are you so certain that, NO pro photographer employs such a Pentax DSLR? Cordially, John Turco I agree with John. I have known several professional photographers, including ones working for large companies, who used pretty inexpensive equipment. They had to show a profit on their work- they could not spend a fortune. Gross income is not the main thing- profit is- for pros. Yet they took very fine pictures (some of them, anyway). A good photographer learns the secret is NOT in the equipment, it is in the eye and talent of the user. |
digital camera battery use
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digital camera battery use
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digital camera battery use
posted to rec.photo.digital:
reply to all of the good people who answered my initial question: thank you thank you for your informative posts.! This morning I purchased a Sanyo Eneloop charger with 8 rechargeable batteries from Costco for about $25. On a different thread Eneloop was very highly recommended because the batteries do not lose their charge as others when not being used and come fully charged when purchased. Best, Aaron You won't be disappointed with these batteries. Read this thread : A further advantage in using the AA's is if you happen to not have your rechargeable at hand or ready you can always purchase a non rechargeable set of AA's in either alkaline or the non rechargeable version of a Lithium AA. Always consult your manual first before using AA alkaline's or AA Lithium's. Some cameras do not recommend their use. Most do. If you change that from recommend to support / allow i will buy-off on it. Many cameras have issues with the voltage difference that using NiCad or NiMH (2.4V to 2.5V) instead of 3.3V (Li-ion / Li-Poly) dual alkaline cell equivalent) recommended batteries. |
digital camera battery use
A good
photographer learns the secret is NOT in the equipment, it is in the eye and talent of the user. I'm glad you posted this. After reading a few posts in this thread I was begriming to think that the battery was the secret to good photos. |
digital camera battery use
On Sat, 10 Nov 2007 22:16:14 -0500, wrote:
A good photographer learns the secret is NOT in the equipment, it is in the eye and talent of the user. I'm glad you posted this. After reading a few posts in this thread I was begriming to think that the battery was the secret to good photos. A large cardboard box and a hat pin. Don't need no steenkin batteries! |
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