photo gear ?

Hi
new to this site and I’m sure its here someplace but could’nt find it .
Was wondering what type of photo gear most of you use, lens type ect.
thanks
dave

My 35 is a Pentax K body, with a 50mm, a 30-70mm zoom and a 70-210mm zoom (I think). I also carry a 2x teleconverter. I usually shoot 200 ASA unless the situation warrants otherwise. I used to shoot mostly slides, but with the scanner the prints are better.

Don’t use the 35mm as much anymore, though. I’ve gotten great results for most of my photography with my Sony Mavica 1.2 megapixel. It’s not “top-of-the-line” but it does a great job for what I usually shoot.

Canon Rebel 2000, 38 - 125 zoom for some work; Canon A70 digital for almost everything I do; my son uses a Canon D1 digital SLR with either 50 - 200 IS zoom or 125 - 600 IS zooms. I use professional Ektachrome slide film, ASA 100, in the Rebel. Digital pictures are recorded in .jpg format for the A70 or .raw format for the D1, and processed using Adobe Photoshop pro. The image stabilization (IS) is worth it’s weight in gold with the longer lenses!

Holy Cow!!! Nice equipment!! I just use a Kodak DX3900 Digital camera. It’s 3.1 Mp. I use Adobe Photoshop Elements to edit the photo as well as create fast web galleries.

I can’t afford the super cameras.

I take it most of you are using digital camera’s now?

I was thinking about getting a nice camera in the next little while (just for railfaning), I suppose digital is the only way to go now?

I’d say that for most of the stuff the average railfan is going to shoot, a digital is probably perfect. No dyes to fade, etc, and digital is very portable. Want me to see a favorite picture? Press “send”. Get a junk shot? You can delete it. (Just make sure it’s not one of those shots that you’ll kick yourself for deleting 20 years from now!) With a digital projector and PowerPoint you can share them with your friends. Want to crop the shot? Shareware programs work almost as well as the high end stuff.

On the other hand, there are still some things that will be better on film. If you are into panning shots, for instance, a cheap 35 will be much less expensive that the digital you will need for the same shot. I won’t be getting rid of the 35mm for quite a while.

It was a 30 year old plus Cannon F1, mixed bag of zoom and fisheye lens.
Still use it every once in a while.
Now its a Minolta Dimage Hi7 digital SLR, 28 mm to 200 mm lens, with zoom and macro built in and digital zoom on top of that.
One camera, one tripod, versus 25 or 30lbs of film camera stuff…
Still, that old Cannon is one tough camera, I wouldnt dare do to the digital camera some of the things I did to that old steel camera.
The cost of film and processing keeps me using the digital, and the ease of the digital to make your own photos, along with the lesser expense.

Ed

…For the most part I use my Cannon EOS Elan 7e 35mm with eye control focus and 28 to 200 zoom lens and sometimes use an Olympus Super Zoom 300 35mm with 35 to 135 lens. Have not jumped into digital yet…Probably will cover that base one of these days. Of course use a tripod when required.

thank you for the quick replys.
Its nice to see a few people still use film!
I have tried digital cameras but find my results are just not the same.
the old dog new tricks thing.
thanks again
dave

I have the DX4330 model, also a 3.1 Mp but with a 10x zoom. I use an ancient copy of Corel Photohouse to crop and resize images for posting.

I haven’t used my old Minolta since, though I have a lot of different lenses for it. I know that I can order CD’s when I get the film developed, but digital is much quicker, cheaper and easier than film.

Here’s one that I took recently with the digital. By the way, once cropped and compressed, this image is only 51.2K bytes on the web. Click on it to enlarge it![:)]

I have a pentax 35 mm zoom. it works for now. want to get a digital when I can.
stay safe
Joe

Funny, reading through all these post, I realized we have mentioned equipment that, if we totaled it all up, would be over 10 grand…
I used to sell cameras for a dept store.
One day, back in the late 70s, a young man came in to pick up his photos.
I was looking through them with him, some fantastic shots of a motorcross race, the shots looked as if he was standing at the bottom of one of the jumps, with the racers airborn just coming off the top off the hill, doing cross ups and one handed jumps.
I asked him what camera he used, expecting him to have some really nice stuff, and one heck of a telephoto lens.
He told me I wouldnt believe him, but he used a Kodak 110.
No way, he would have to be standing in the track to get those shots, and a 110 dosnt take any other lenses.
He went to his car, and returned with a broom handle, that had a old shelf bracket on one end, and a junk accelerater cable off a motorcycle taped to it length wise, running down the handle.
The 110 screwed on the bracket, and the cable tripped the shutter button.
The thing was held together with duct tape and wood screws.
He would stand on the sideline, and when the racers were coming up the hill, he would stick the broom handle out in the track, and hit the shutter just as they crested the hill, guessing at where to point.
It worked, really well in fact, he ended up selling quite a few of his photos to a local motorcross shop for their calander.

Moral of the story?
You can own $4500.00 worth of Nikon 35mm, and still take just snapshots, or $29.00 worth of Kodak 110 and a free broom handle and take sellable photos.
I guess it would be that it really dosnt matter what the equipment cost, or how many do-dads, bells and whistles are on the camera, it all boils down to the person behind the viewfinder, and how they approach taking the photos they want.

Ed

…How true Ed…and Big Boy, that’s a real nice shot. I would think it took some doing to keep the snow from upsetting the lens opening. and making the pic dark. [8D]

I still have 2 Pentax K 1000, 35 mm, SLR bodies and an f/2, 50 mm lens. I recently bought 2 Pentax ZX-50 bodies, a Pentax 35 - 80mm f/3.5 - f/5.6 zoom lens, which is auto focus, and I kept my 70 - 210 mm Tokina Zoom lens from the K - 1000’s. I also bought a Pentax 50 mm f/2 autofocus lens for one of the ZX 50 cameras, and I use it as a “rainy day” lens when I need more light. I also have a Sony Hi 8 camcorder which I use to videotape trains at the same time I photograph them with my 35 mm cameras.

…Big Boy: how about some tips on how to install a photo on the forum here as you did above…and again, that really is a nice one…

Have you seen any of the Mars photos? The rovers carry a 1MP camera! What is needed is a quality lens with a sharp focus. For railfans, a high shutter is needed for moving equipment, or fast adjustments for slower or static subjects. For model work, you need a macro capable of copying a business card. Depth of field becomes important.

I use a Hewlett-Packard Photosmart 945. This is a 5.3 Megapixel camera, built in 300mm zoom, and while it isn’t a SLR, with an adapter, it will accept additional glasses on top of its own, plus telophoto lenses. It also has an adjustable shutter speed (16 - 1/2000 sec.), aperature (F2.8 - F11.3), and film speed (100, 200, 400). Shoots in full color, black and white, and sepia.

Here are some of my recent photos.
To see more of my photos click on the link:
http://www.railpictures.net/showphotos.php?userid=2955

Click on either photo to see a larger version.

…Great pic’s John. I like the way one can see the grade change on the other side of the bridge.

I still use my Olympus OM-4T with its spot meter and through-the-lens flash metering system to get just the exposure I want, not what some chip programmer thinks I should use. I use it with a 50mm F1.2, a 28-85mm and 80-200mm zooms. Until I find an affordable digital with most of these features, I’ll still use film.

We recently got a Minolta Dimage A1 digital camera (& Ed, thanks for the info about your camera a couple months back, it helped us in making our choice). I really like it, I’ve been playing around with it a lot trying to learn everything it does. Although at the rate I’m going I’ll need a new hard drive or an awful lot of CDs before too long.

–Nora