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#1 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 4
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I am debating between these two prosumer model cameras. I am worried, however, about the few bad experiences some people have reported in Steves forums. I do not want to buy a lemon, obviously. The FZ30 and S9000 seem to offer similar features, price, etc, but I don't know about quality. Are there any informed opinions out there?
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Oregon, USA
Posts: 18,143
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I can give you an informed opinion on the Fuji S-9000, because I own one. I honestly think that it is an over hyped digital camera. My Canon S-2 IS does a much better job with any photo task over the Fuji S-9000 and it has the IS feature which the Fuji S-9000 does not have.
I do not own the Panasonic FZ-30, but I have owned both the FZ-10 and the FZ-20 and both produced more noise than I could tolerate. MT |
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#3 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 4
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Other comparable cameras so far, according to forums, are the
Canon Powershot Pro 1 Olympus E500 and Konica Minolta A200 My biggest requirements are a manual focus ring, and low low low shutter lag, followed by macro/zoom ability, and high megapixels. All of these seem to be in the similar price range. I am concerned about the noise of the FZ30, so maybe the Canon or Olympus? |
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Oregon, USA
Posts: 18,143
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I owned and soldmy Canon Pro1. It was horribly slow at focusing. I do own the Olympus E-500, so I can offer first hand experiences on that camera.
As you might have seen me mention today on the forum, IMHO I would really stay away from any of KM's point and shoot cameras such as the A-200 because as of 04/01 they will become total orphans as KM goes out of all camera business except their dSLR production. MT |
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#5 | ||
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Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 921
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flashbar wrote:
Quote:
(after that you can take shots of really fast targets) But more importantly what do you photograph, flashbar? Because for lanscapes, architecture and insides you'll want 28mm wide angle camera instead of unwide angle ultrazoom. And in what conditions? (outside, or lot insise/lower light) Olympus E-500 is DSLR, so it isn't directly comparable. Canon "Pro" 1 doesn't have image stabilization, also it's full button zoom. If you want that manual focusing is done using "fly-by-wire" ring instead of morse coding button tapping that drops away many of those media sexy ultrazooms with menu surfing controls and button zoom. mtclimber wrote: Quote:
+after warranty period every maker charges such amount from most repairs that you'll almost get new camera at that price. And same way S2 is overhyped camera. What prosumer it is when it doesn't have even manual/mechanical zoom? Also wide angle is lacking. |
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#6 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 2,568
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i went through same delima
i chose fz30 in the end. i liked the lens, ois, focus ring, non extruding lens, user interface, weight, comfort and grip, and not to mention the excellent revfiews ofcourse the pana does get reviewed as being a noisy cam. i have no issues with the noise. wit ois i can run shutter speeds down to 1/6 without to many issues. ois is great its actually something tht works. The hi iso from the s9000/9500 i think presents excessive noise above 800 making it unuseable. im not sure if the created iso1600 because they thought "hey this is a practical idea im sure somebody can selvage some sort of detail and image from this muck of noise" or its a marketing gimmick saying look at me i can do iso 1600.... anyways definately cafter hold and playing around with both cams i found the fz30 to be a far superior cam. i have owned for arounf 4 months now and i am very pleased with it. ken |
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#7 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 4
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As far as what I'm going to shoot, I don't want to be limited, so versatility is key. Macro and portraits will be most prevalent, but I do travel and landscapes come into play. I was frustrated with losing spur of the moment shots with my father's Canon Powershot S1, so low shutter lag relative to that. Also it lacks the focus ring, which I find is a must-option in the camera I purchase.
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#8 |
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 40
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I've decided to buy the S9000, because I've seen several hundred pictures in the last weeks and the image quality is quite good if you can handle the cam. The FZ30 simply has too much noise in lower ISO. I don't want to post-process every picture with dark or unicolored areas. Another point was the wide-angle of the S9000 and the better performance in low light.
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