KNERSIE wrote:Thanks alot Randi, that really helps.

KNERSIE wrote:milkmaid wrote:If I were purchasing a camera, I would definitely go with one that had image stabilization. The camera I have now (Olympus SP-350) is great, but it doesn't have enough zoom, and even with low zoom, if the animal moves or I move - the pic is blurry. It takes amazing scenery pictures and with a bit of work I can get good action pics (ie my chariot race photos) but it's tough. My folks have a Canon with image stabilization and incredible zoom (like 12x with the option to go to 48x) and I get spoiled when I'm home for the summer and can use that one.
I'd also suggest getting a camera that can work well in low-light settings; some are designed to pull in extra light even in indoor and low light situations. Mine doesn't, which is frustrating; the Canon my folks have will do that.
Claire, can you find out which model it is, please?
Also is it a 12X optical with 4 X digital zoom? How far can you shoot to still have decent quality?





gimpyrancher wrote:Make it easy.
50mm equals 1X
400mm lense equals 8X
10 power binoculars have 1000mm lenses.
a 50X magnification is equal to a 5000mm lense.
The higher the power the less quality. But I can still read what brand of cigarettes you hold up at the higher powers if I use a steady base.
Hope this helps.
gimpyrancher


KNERSIE wrote:gimpyrancher wrote:Make it easy.
50mm equals 1X
400mm lense equals 8X
10 power binoculars have 1000mm lenses.
a 50X magnification is equal to a 5000mm lense.
The higher the power the less quality. But I can still read what brand of cigarettes you hold up at the higher powers if I use a steady base.
Hope this helps.
gimpyrancher
That part is easy enough to understand, what is the significance of the first number, ie 18-55 vs 36-108mm?
Can I assume a 70-300mm lens zooms equally powerfull to a 28-112 and to a X4 optical zoom for instance?
What exactly does the 4X digital zoom do in combination with say a 12X optical zoom?




backhoeboogie wrote:I had the EOS 650 (35 mm) and all my lenses and toys fit the digital EOS. The wife bought me one for our 25th anniversary.
You can put the multipliers on, then the 400 mm zoom, and you have to have a tri-pod - no matter how steady you are. Bean bags help but it is extremely difficult. With just one multiplier and the 70 to 210 zoom, I had great mountain goats shots but they were still.
It is much easier to go to the highest pixels rating you have and zoom in on the picture via computer.


I think that S1500fd is probably an upgrade from what I have or a different model.

KNERSIE wrote:I think that S1500fd is probably an upgrade from what I have or a different model.
The S1500fd has image stabiliser that the S1000fd don't have.

IluvABbeef wrote:KNERSIE wrote:I think that S1500fd is probably an upgrade from what I have or a different model.
The S1500fd has image stabiliser that the S1000fd don't have.
Ah okay I see...so then other than that both cameras should be pretty much the same or similar.

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