I've done my research - read reviews in various places and several threads here (including the recent one by BigTrubs which created some controversy). I'd welcome some comments regarding the questions below, especially if you have direct experience of some of the cameras I've mentioned.
My basic dilemma is whether to switch to a DSLR when skiing, or try to stay with a compact, and in the latter case which one.
I already own a DSLR (Oly E510 with lenses covering from 18 to 300 mm in 35 mm-equivalent). I'm afraid that if I take it with me I will lose countless photo opportunities with the camera in my backpack, as my main aim is to ski, not stop for significant periods of time and take ski photos. Also, I'd be worried about falling on it and breaking it.
I could also consider having the DSLR in the backpack (for touring and other occasions when there's time for photography) and a compact in my jacket for quick snaps.
My current compact is a 4-year old Olympus C-7000, which has a decent lens. I've taken some nice shots with it but I'd be ready for an upgrade if there was a good one to replace it.
My IDEAL compact camera for skiing would have:
- an optical viewfinder, however crappy
- a decent burst mode
- a decent shutter lag (I know, it's not going to be DSLR-class)
- decent but not necessarily best-in-class IQ
- waterproofness (but there's no waterproof camera with an optical viewfinder).
So what are my options?
- Canon offers most models with a viewfinder - G10/11, A650IS, SD990...but the burst mode is pretty slow on them - in fact significantly slower than on my old compact. Any recommendations here?
- Nikon P6000? (not the best IQ in class but if anyone here uses it - how fast is it?)
- forget the optical viewfinder...and then which camera? - a waterproof one or a better-quality one with maybe a higher burst rate?
- a speed demon like the Casio EX FC100?
- Others I've missed?
- stay with my Oly C-7000 until someone makes a real upgrade?
Am I missing something important in the decision process? (well, money - let's say that within reason, ie not Leica prices, I could afford it, but I'd pay top dollar only for a cam checking a lot of the boxes).
Thanks for your views!
Bookmarks