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*ist D

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Pentax *ist D


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Rating
Reviewed by: frank
 (Casual)

Review Date
February 9, 2008

Overall Rating
 4 of 5

Value Rating
 4 of 5

Used product for
1 to 3 months

Visitors rate this review
4.00 of 5,
2 votes

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Review 1 of 16

Price Paid:  $350.00 from ebay

Summary:

Just got the camera and having been using my old film lenses on it and it works great. I use the Nikon d70s at work and this is built very similar in fact the body plastic is identical only it is smaller and lighter and easier to carry. It was as if Pentax copied the d70 and made a smaller version of it. I did a lot of research before I bought it and really I found out that it uses the same sensor as the Nikon d100 d70 and d40. The image quality really depends on your lens and your white balance. I have gotten some great collor images with this camear. I have read that there is an issue with softness and really I don't see it. I think it depends on your lens. All my lenses are old and use glass not plastic so that might help. This camera is really the predecessor to the K10d. It has full pofessional features. It is very responsive and I like using it. The only fault I have with it is that auto focus syste4m in dim lighting. Get use to focussing manually. In the day it is fast, faster that the Nikon I would say as fast as a Canon. This cameara is the inbetween of Nikon and Canon.

Strengths:

Small and compact. Great shooting responsiveness.

Weaknesses:

Auto focussing in Dim lighting

Similar Products Used:

Nikon d70



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

jajurek

( Intermediate)

Review Date
June 28, 2007

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
3 Months to 1 year

Visitors rate this review
4.00 of 5,
2 votes

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Review 2 of 16

Price Paid:  $400.00 from CametaCamera

Summary:

Very good camera, especially for analog Pentax cameras users with K,M lens. For beginners not recommended, rather for intermediates.

Strengths:

Small, light, rigid body. Good controls. Multiple exposure, DOF preview, hyper program AE,. Individual AV and TV dials. Focus Point Switch Lever. Auto Bracketing (exposure). Works with K, M lens ( in manual mode). Powered from AA accumulators. Pentaprism viewfinder.

Weaknesses:

Sensitivity from 200 ISO. Difficult access to CF card. Cumbersome four-way controller. LCD monitor too small. Lack of image stabilization.

Similar Products Used:

Canon EOS 350D (Rebel XT), Canon EOS 400D (Rebel XTi).

Customer Service:

Not used yet.



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

danag42

( Professional)

Review Date
August 9, 2006

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
4.40 of 5,
5 votes

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Review 3 of 16

Price Paid:  $2300.00 from Camera store in Mont

Summary:

I'm glad i held out for a Pentax DSLR. I almost jumped ship to the copier-company cameras, I;'ve used some of their cameras in the past. But I started in the 1960's, when it was Pentax and Zeiss if you wanted the best lenses, so I had a collection of really excellent glass.
The thing that sold me is that all my K mount (or even M42) lenses will work and meter on this camera. Of course, a manual lens is still manual, but Pentax is to be praised for letting us old codgers use our favorite old glass on the new sooper-dooper electronic cameras. Of course, I had to get the 12-24 super-wide because of the crop factor, but, hey, it's business expense!
I actually like the fact that Pentax has held back on the in-camera sharpening. I'll do my own #%^&$ sharpening in Photoshop, thank you very much!! The copier-company cameras seem to sharpen jpegs or tiffs so you get artifacts, so I like a camera thart lets me do my own sharpening.
I've been shooting RAW, which bypasses the whole in-camera processing nonsense. If you're shooting for a living you really need to go with RAW. Maybe I'm prejiduced, I'm one of those darkroom freaks with Dektol stains on m fingers! RAW puts me back in the driver's seat with my images, and it sure doesn't smell as bad as the chemical darkroom!
I congratulate Pentax on their commitment to backwards compatability. They have the most complete usability from old classics like my 45-125 K lens, totally manual. It works just like it does on my old MX cameras. Plus it has all the electro-techno connections for the new lenses that thind they're smarter than the photographer. I'm pleaed as punch with this camera, and it's the first Pentax professional grade camera that's not medium format in a long time. (Remenber the LX?)
It uses Lexars WA technology, so I can shoot a long string of RAW files without running into the dreaded buffer problem. The viewfinder is bright and clear, it makes C and N look like dark tunnels!! Imortant for an old codger like me whose eyes are not what they used to be!
This is not a camera for beginners, Pentax have the K100D and other simpler machines for the hobbyist market. But a serious photographer can't go wrong with this unit!

Strengths:

Well placed controls, easy to get used to and work quickly with. Uses all thosd old really classis lenses that some of us have collected over the yers. Very solid feel, I was worried that Pentax had given up on pro gear, but this goes a long way to redressing that issue. I anxiously await the new 10 megapixel DSLR with shake reduction.
I have a lot of hope for Pentax ressurecting their pro customers, we may be old but we have a lot of experience that transends the analog/digtial devide!

Weaknesses:

When the camera first came out, they left out the ability to use the old K and M lenses. Well, the howl of outrage was heard from Tokyo to London, and they quickly backpedalled with a firmware upgrade. Good job, Pentax, you listen to your customers!
They left out the cam to allow you to use ancient manual lenses in apeture priority mode, so we use them in manual (after all, they ARE manual lenses). Hopefully the 10 megapixel pro model will include the cam. I'm old and getting lazy. Even though I mostly use it in the studio with a flash meter, so it stays in Manual most of the time anyway. But for personal goofing around, I'd like the cam back in the mount, no more "crippled" KAF mount, please!

Similar Products Used:

Nkon F, Canon T70 and other fancy Canon and Nikon film cameras, Olympus digital SLR's (the sensor is just too tiny), all sorts of lenses from old classic manuals to modern electronic marvels. Pentax MX cameras, and even a K1000 just for the sake of having one (no DOF preview, so the MX cameras with DOF preview got the most workout).

Customer Service:

No direct experience, but their reaction to the outrage over the "crippled" KAF2 mounnt was swift and took care of the problem, so I suspect they actually listen to the customers.



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

Heathglen

( Expert)

Review Date
January 26, 2006

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 4 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
4.25 of 5,
4 votes

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Review 4 of 16

Price Paid:  $1350.00 from Dallas - Ritz Camera

Summary:

When I moved from a Pentax Z-1 to a DSLR, I looked for one that felt right, would let me use my Pentax lenses and produced excellent product. After I compared the D and DS, there was no question - the D felt right and worked like my Z-1. I have had NO disappointments. The D has proven a reliable tool that always challenges me to do better. If the results don't come up to my standards, it's always my fault - never the camera's. With use, anything that was an annoyance has corrected itself (the difficulty of removing the CF card), become something that I became more capable of using (the fiddly 4-way controller) or I've bought equipment to overcome (the 1.5 muliplication factor). Am I happy with my choice? You betcha!

Strengths:

I could transfer ALL my old lenses and habits from the Z-1 to the D. Thus the usage is highly intuitive. I've loved the Hyper mode for over a decade. Pictures are great. (Quality lenses helps a lot.) I do most of my composition and cropping in the viewfinder so I don't have lengthy post processing sessions. All Pentax lenses work the way they did on the cameras I bought them for. This means that Pentax has a lot of lenses to choose from. (Caveat - with the increasing popularity of Pentax DSLRs, quality used lenses are fetching higher prices.) The battery grip both extends the time between battery changes and balances the camera with any of the larger, heavier lenses. The steel frame makes for a sturdy camera. even when mounting long lenses. "It just feels right."

Weaknesses:

I don't like the 1.5 magnificaiton factor. It force-crops the lens. It doesn't change the perspective. This is sort of OK until you need wide angle shots. This has made me go from 28mm as my widest lens in use, to 17mm or 20mm as my widest perspective. There aren't as many of these out there and Pentax often charges a lot for accessories. This means that finding used ones (to save money) can require extensive searches or modifying other items to meet the need. The buffer is of limited size, so the amount of burst picture taking is limited. This is not my style of photography, so it has never been an issue. There is no anti-shake facility. Isn't that what tripods and monopods eliminate?

Similar Products Used:

Canon and Nikon DSLRs

Customer Service:

I have never needed anything for this product. Previously, I had damaged a lens. Pentax repaired it quickly and economically. Years later, it give no problems.



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

gerlw

( Intermediate)

Review Date
November 24, 2005

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
2.20 of 5,
5 votes

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Review 5 of 16

Price Paid:  $1300.00 from A&M camera

Summary:

I have used my 1st* D for over one year now,l and must say it is the best camera yet.! I have always found Pentax to make excellent cameras, but this tiime they have outdone themselfves. The exposures are right on the button each time. It is a pleasure to handle it. All the controls fall into place easily.

Weaknesses:

None.

Similar Products Used:

No Dslr, but film Slrs for years. In addition, I have three other Digital cameras.

Customer Service:

Not applicable as yet.



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