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ZEISS DTI thermal imaging cameras. For more discoveries at night, and during the day.

Reviews by mikfoz

Recommended
Yes
Price
0$
Pros
  • Ease of use, solid construction, secure camera mount, ergonomic
Cons
  • Need third hand to move camera and zoom at same time, trigger hand can become tired with extended tracking of flying birds.
The first thing to strike you on removing it from the box is its solidity. All the bits subject to maximum wear and tear are metal in construction. Attaching it to your tripod mount is simple enough and you can actually get a decent grip on the thing to tighten the thread. Further evidence of excellent build quality can be seen by looking at the ball mechanism which looks like it would take a direct hit from a bullet.

The quick release shoe for the camera looks unconventional if you're used to those plastic wedges. It attaches via a bayonet mount which clicks reassuringly into place and needs a caplock depressing to disengage it. The whole thing will rotate through almost 360 independently of the ball head to allow you to take panoramas and pan accurately. A solid (I'll be using this word a lot) thumblock fixes the position firmly.

Using the ball head is almost shockingly simple. You squeeze the trigger and the head moves freely round the ball. Release it and it locks. That's it.

There's a collar with a slot in it to decide which axis you want the maximum elevation/depression in which then follows you round after you've gone past the initial restriction. Once you're happy with the position you release the trigger and it stays where you left it without creeping. Should you accidentally lose grip on the trigger assembly it locks instantly so your camera doesn't swing round like a pendulum and overbalance your tripod.

The trigger is weighted just about right, feels fine in my large hands and not in any way fiddly, yet is just as useable for people with smaller hands due to a no-nonsense ergonomic shape and feels solid. You can part depress it to give a more fluid feel or fully depress it to rotate with very little friction.

There's little more to be said about operating it: it really is unbelievably simple.

A drawback in use is that with one hand on the head and another on the camera shutter you need a third hand to operate zoom or any other lens function while tracking a bird. This puts it at a disadvantage to a gimbal mount. However, this is offset by the secure lock for composing for more static subjects that's less vulnerable to nudging the camera.

In terms of ruggedness, it easily copes with mounting my Sigma 50-500 and a Pentax K10 and there's no creep once the mount has locked regardless of the position it has been left in. There's absolutely no way the camera and tripod head will accidentally detach, and failure of the mount is unlikely except under a totally catastrophic impact.

In summary, this a solid and relatively cheap solution to using a tripod and freely tracking moving subjects or taking a firmly fixed postion with faff-free lock and unlock of the head. Recommended. :t:
Recommended
Yes
Price
0$
Pros
  • Bombproof construction and built in shake reduction
Cons
  • Slow FPs in burst mode
This camera is still a great buy if you want a budget SLR. I've been massively impressed with it as a replacement for my *istDS. Metering is consistently bang on the money in difficult lighting circumstances.

From a purely use in the field perspective one thing I've found great is the ability to use a thumbwheel to go from pattern to selective to spot on AF and pattern to centre weight to spot on metering without resort to menus. You can similarly tweak auto bracketing via a button and thumbwheel. Info in the viewfinder is comprehensive and the top panel is well set out and easy to understand. The Fn menu is similar to the *istDS to use and pretty quick to access.

Image quality is good; criticisms of JPEG quality are largely unfounded in most real situations and the RAW formats are stunningly crisp.

Also worth a mention is the anti-shake function. I could get a sharp image at 210mm at 1/70s hand-held but it was impossible without it, no matter how much I concentrated. Some people will get less benefit due to poor technique. and it won't save you if you are incapable of holding a camera poperly, but if you can already hold one steady this will give you great results with any Pentax lens.

I've been really impressed with this as an upgrade. I honestly can't see why anyone but a professional photographer would want any more out of a camera and I've yet to really hit any niggles. I know the K20D is out there, but at half the pricce this is well worth consideration if money is, in fact, for you, an object.
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