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#31
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Nikon D200 vs. D80
On Thu, 21 Sep 2006 03:09:32 -0400, Bill wrote:
Your comments may have a different effect than the ones you intended. Guess why? Because my mom said I talk too loud? Hey I can't help that, I was trained that way... :-) Yes, you talk too loud. The other part of the answer is that the loudness is only part of what you learned at Mom's School of Spin. The problem is that you do it so poorly that Rockwell gets a free pass, since your own words damage your credibility. Perhaps you should ask Mom for a refund. Or take a refresher course. |
#32
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Nikon D200 vs. D80
On Thu, 21 Sep 2006 09:16:08 -0400, Cynicor wrote:
As I stated, it was primarily a feature comparison. Any conclusions he makes on those comparisons are clearly his opinion, but the feature comparisons themself are accurate; which is the subject of the article. The D200 is 120 better than the D80. Actually, no. It doesn't work that way. Cameras aren't compared the same way that you'd compare print resolution. Your calculation would have us believe that the D200 is 150% better than the D80 ((200-80)/80) when in fact it is 525% better ((200^2-80^2) / 80^2). So if the D80 is worth $1000, the D200 is a real bargain, since it's clearly worth more than $5000. |
#33
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Nikon D200 vs. D80
ASAAR wrote:
On Thu, 21 Sep 2006 09:16:08 -0400, Cynicor wrote: As I stated, it was primarily a feature comparison. Any conclusions he makes on those comparisons are clearly his opinion, but the feature comparisons themself are accurate; which is the subject of the article. The D200 is 120 better than the D80. Actually, no. It doesn't work that way. Cameras aren't compared the same way that you'd compare print resolution. Your calculation would have us believe that the D200 is 150% better than the D80 ((200-80)/80) when in fact it is 525% better ((200^2-80^2) / 80^2). So if the D80 is worth $1000, the D200 is a real bargain, since it's clearly worth more than $5000. But conversely, the D80 sensor is 3872x2592. The D200 sensor is 3872x2592. If you compare sensor sizes, you get 10036224/10036224, or 100%. Therefore, the D200 is 100% better than the D80. |
#34
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Nikon D200 vs. D80
In rec.photo.digital Cynicor wrote:
ASAAR wrote: On Thu, 21 Sep 2006 09:16:08 -0400, Cynicor wrote: As I stated, it was primarily a feature comparison. Any conclusions he makes on those comparisons are clearly his opinion, but the feature comparisons themself are accurate; which is the subject of the article. The D200 is 120 better than the D80. Actually, no. It doesn't work that way. Cameras aren't compared the same way that you'd compare print resolution. Your calculation would have us believe that the D200 is 150% better than the D80 ((200-80)/80) when in fact it is 525% better ((200^2-80^2) / 80^2). So if the D80 is worth $1000, the D200 is a real bargain, since it's clearly worth more than $5000. But conversely, the D80 sensor is 3872x2592. The D200 sensor is 3872x2592. If you compare sensor sizes, you get 10036224/10036224, or 100%. Therefore, the D200 is 100% better than the D80. That is 100% equal or 0% better. -- Thomas T. Veldhouse Key Fingerprint: 2DB9 813F F510 82C2 E1AE 34D0 D69D 1EDC D5EC AED1 |
#35
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Nikon D200 vs. D80
Thomas T. Veldhouse wrote:
I can't find in the specs from Nikon where it says the D80 has mirror lockup. Also, both the D80 and the D200 sport a 10.2MP sensor 3872x2592 pixels. Seems the same to me. The D80 has no mirror lockup mode. What it does have is a fixed 0.4 second shutter delay which can be set when using the camera on a telescope or microscope (according to the manual this is why they provide the delay). The shutter opens 0.4 seconds after the mirror has flipped up. It also has 2, 5, 10 and 20 second options for a regular self-timer with no mirror lockup. David |
#36
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Nikon D200 vs. D80
On Thu, 21 Sep 2006 10:22:39 -0400, Cynicor wrote:
Actually, no. It doesn't work that way. Cameras aren't compared the same way that you'd compare print resolution. Your calculation would have us believe that the D200 is 150% better than the D80 ((200-80)/80) when in fact it is 525% better ((200^2-80^2) / 80^2). So if the D80 is worth $1000, the D200 is a real bargain, since it's clearly worth more than $5000. But conversely, the D80 sensor is 3872x2592. The D200 sensor is 3872x2592. If you compare sensor sizes, you get 10036224/10036224, or 100%. Therefore, the D200 is 100% better than the D80. Interesting theory, but the D200 is older, so the D80 is 100% better, unless you have a workable conspiracy theory implicating Nikon. I tend to think Nikon innocent, with the D80 being a major advance for all photographers, since it's moving in the direction of allowing DSLRs to produce in-camera the kind of intense azure that you and so many other photographers prefer. Quelle cool tool! |
#37
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Nikon D200 vs. D80
ASAAR wrote:
On Thu, 21 Sep 2006 10:22:39 -0400, Cynicor wrote: Actually, no. It doesn't work that way. Cameras aren't compared the same way that you'd compare print resolution. Your calculation would have us believe that the D200 is 150% better than the D80 ((200-80)/80) when in fact it is 525% better ((200^2-80^2) / 80^2). So if the D80 is worth $1000, the D200 is a real bargain, since it's clearly worth more than $5000. But conversely, the D80 sensor is 3872x2592. The D200 sensor is 3872x2592. If you compare sensor sizes, you get 10036224/10036224, or 100%. Therefore, the D200 is 100% better than the D80. Interesting theory, but the D200 is older, so the D80 is 100% better, unless you have a workable conspiracy theory implicating Nikon. I tend to think Nikon innocent, with the D80 being a major advance for all photographers, since it's moving in the direction of allowing DSLRs to produce in-camera the kind of intense azure that you and so many other photographers prefer. Quelle cool tool! So you're saying that it's not the D200's fault that I blue out the highlights on that Seattle photo? |
#38
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Nikon D200 vs. D80
In rec.photo.digital Cynicor wrote:
So you're saying that it's not the D200's fault that I blue out the highlights on that Seattle photo? I think the sentance above says it all :-) "I" did it. -- Thomas T. Veldhouse Key Fingerprint: 2DB9 813F F510 82C2 E1AE 34D0 D69D 1EDC D5EC AED1 |
#39
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Nikon D200 vs. D80
Bill wrote:
"ASAAR" wrote: Pie Crust Bill wrote: For comparison to see if you need the D200 over the D80, perhaps. But there are factual errors, such as the sensor being the same as the D200 (it is not), no mirror lockup (it has it), etc. Didn't he say that they both had mirror lockup, but the D80's was more limited, being that it was really just for sensor cleaning? While the D200 can hold the mirror up for an extended period, the difference is merely a period of time. The purpose is to eliminate mirror slap vibrations, and both do that exactly the same way. I don't know what the D80 does, the D200 has 2 options, a 1/4 second delay or a two-click option where the second shutter click fires the shutter. 1/4 second might not help much for a long or macro lens swaying on a tripod. True mirror lockup means the mirror is locked up out of the way before a lense is even attached so that a lense with a protruding rear element does not get hit by the mirror when it moves, then stays up AFTER the exposure so the mirror doesn't fall on the rear of a lense. The D200 does not offer this option. I'm pretty sure the D80 doesn't either. This isn't a big deal these days as most lenses don't protrude into the mirror chamber. The comment about the D80 is only for sensor cleaning is VERY misleading. Also in the comparsion chart he says "no" for mirror lockup, which is wrong since the D80 clearly does have the same delay lockup as the D200. |
#40
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Nikon D200 vs. D80
On Thu, 21 Sep 2006 03:09:32 -0400, Bill wrote:
Didn't he say that they both had mirror lockup, but the D80's was more limited, being that it was really just for sensor cleaning? Yes, which is bullsh!t. While the D200 can hold the mirror up for an extended period, the difference is merely a period of time. The purpose is to eliminate mirror slap vibrations, and both do that exactly the same way. True mirror lockup means the mirror is locked up out of the way before a lense is even attached so that a lense with a protruding rear element does not get hit by the mirror when it moves, then stays up AFTER the exposure so the mirror doesn't fall on the rear of a lense. I bet you wished you knew just what you are on about. -- Neil Delete l to reply |
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