Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/01/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Aaron, I'm chuckling over here because you gave me EXACTLY the information I was looking for! It was almost as if you created those pages for me. Thank you! And Jerry, thanks for the input as well. I have read the DP Review review and am aware of the noise issues. Thanks for the heads-up, though. Thanks again, Aaron, you really helped me out. Think I'll be getting one of these after all... Cheers, Craig On Jan 10, 2006, at 10:00 AM, lug-request@leica-users.org wrote: > Message: 29 > Date: Tue, 10 Jan 2006 12:54:36 -0500 > From: Aaron Sandler <aaron.sandler@duke.edu> > Subject: Re: [Leica] Dlux2 > To: Leica Users Group <lug@leica-users.org> > Message-ID: <6.2.1.2.0.20060110123140.05bb5c80@imap.duke.edu> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed > > Hi Craig, > > I have the LX1. I think it's viable for pretty fast shooting in the > street...it won't beat a Leica M, but it beats my old Stylus Epic. > > I put my first impressions of the LX1 on my webpage here: > http://www.duke.edu/~ahh2/2005_10_18_LX1First/whythiscam.html > and here: > http://www.duke.edu/~ahh2/2005_10_20_NCStateFair2005/LX1_street.html > > In answer to your questions: > > You can use it exactly the way you describe...the manual settings > (aperture, shutter speed, focus distance in feet or meters including a > DOF > scale!) are quite easy to do with the separate "joystick" and once you > set > them they are there until you change them...it definitely remember the > settings between shots. If you turn it off it will remember the > exposure > but not the focus setting. If you don't touch any buttons for a while > the > thing goes to sleep, but when you wake it up the same settings are > still > there. I've developed the tick of half-pressing the shutter button to > keep > it from going to sleep. > > Issues with using it this way are: > 1) There is a lag of a couple of seconds between shots if you are > shooting > RAW files. Much faster for jpg. I still shoot RAW for the > flexibility in > post-processing. > 2) RAW files are huge...16MB each...I get 53 shots per 1GB card. You > need > several cards and plenty of storage space on your computer. I just > installed two new 250GB drives. :) > 3) Battery life can become an issue when you leave the camera on for a > long > time as there's no way to turn off the big bright LCD. I bought a 2nd > battery. > > That said, it's a small camera and I like it very much. I do miss the > M > viewfinder for composing, I find the LCD (nice as it is) to be a very > different feel since you're looking at a 2D projection of the scene > rather > than the the 3D sort-of-looking-through-the-camera feeling of the M. I > feel less a part of the scene, less connected to it, the when I'm > using my > M. But it's a lot smaller and a LOT lighter...and digital. > > Hope this helps. > > Best, > Aaron > > >> Hello All, >> >> I'm interested in the Dlux2/LXI as it is small and has manual >> ability. Are >> there any pro shooters out there using it and, if so, what are your >> impressions? Is it viable for fast shooting in the street? As in, set >> it >> at 28mm, set a hyperfocal distance, and fire away? If you take a shot >> like >> under those, does it remember the settings or switch back to auto? >> I'm not >> asking what the depth of field is, I'm just asking if it's relatively >> simple to set the camera manually, have an idea of your hyperfocal >> distance, and leave it that way for a long period of time without >> having >> to restart the camera or reset the controls. >> >> Thanks, >> >> Craig