andygold wrote: Quote:
I only had the "lens error" once, and that was due to the lens hitting my finger as it opened. The reason for the return was totally due to picture quality. Although "most" of my outdoor shots were of great quality, half of my indoor shots were not. A good half of my shots were either improperly exposed or blurry. It made no difference whether I was in auto mode or shooting in scene modes or even shooting with manual settings. One thing I found was that the camera always wanted to shoot between 1/5 of a second and 1/60 of a second. Great shutter speedsif you wantblurry pictures. It made no difference whether the flash was on or off. Distance to the subject made no difference either (I know the flash is not that powerful). I tried upping the power to the flash, and also playing with every setting I could tweak to get a decent picture. Playing with white balance, and exposure compensation (using the histogram) although it helped, it did not solve the problem. Even in brighly lit rooms, the pictures were either blurry or wierdly colored (played with white balance and everything else to no avail). It was very good that the camera allows you to instantly see what you just shot, as 1/2 the time, I had to retake the picture. Sometimes no amount of reshooting could get a decent pic.
You can go through almost every camera specific forum on the board and find a similar post. What appears to be normal lighting to your eye isn’t necessarily enough to take a picture. If the camera is choosing 1/5 second I can guarantee the lens is wide open and that is all it can generate to properly expose the photo. There is no magic setting or tweak that will give you more than 1/5 second and a proper exposure except cranking up the ISO. The camera is f2.8 at wide to around f5 at telephoto, which is pretty standard for pocket cameras. I don’t know of a pocket camera that has a faster lens or that will give you more than 1/5 second under the same conditions and ISO setting.
Not having enough light for a shot plays havoc with the white balance on any camera.
Flash sync speed is always 1/60 second in snapshot or any scene mode. The camera is counting on the flash strobe being in the thousandths of a second to freeze the action. Most consumer digital cameras flash sync at 1/60 second except for some Sony cameras that sync at 1/45. Sony seems to think it gives better backgrounds but some people complain of ghosts in brightly lit situations. It is a tradeoff and both approaches have merit.
You might be happy with a Fuji F10. It does better than most cameras at high ISO, although there is additional noise compared to shooting at lower ISO. I think the camera automatically goes to ISO400 for flash, which extends the flash range nicely. For a large print you would probably want to manually reduce that if possible.
The flash is a little odd on the Z750. If it sees bright lights in the scene it seems to switch to a fill-flash mode where it throttles down the flash. Spot metering combined with boosting the flash seems to overcome that. I have a custom scene mode for that. Flash assist works well unless you are making a giant print where the extra noise would show. But the bright indoor lights seem to turn that down as well. Again you have to switch to spot metering so the camera doesn’t see lights. I don’t normally use flash assist since Shadow/Highlight in Photoshop seems to do the same thing and you have more control.
I’ve already posted this on another thread, but since you are new to the forum you aren’t tired of it yet. I measured 25 feet from the face of the fireplace for this shot with flash assist and spot metering. The dark wall is another 2 feet. The left light is off and the right one has only a 16 watt bulb, so it isn’t really contributing to the shot. I have another shot from 15 feet with the flash assist off that has a pretty good exposure as well. Casio should do a firmware update to change the way it responds to light in the scene, but you can do pretty well with spot metering. I rarely get a less than perfect shot with the camera BTW.