Psyber wrote:Wedgie wrote:Light makes a HUGE difference with a digital. (My ISO only goes up to 200 and at 200 they come out very grainy)
I cant even take photos at Elizabeth night games and hardly bother on low light winters day.
Its all practise, I initally had to take 200 shots to get 40 decent photos, these days I can usually get 40 decent photos from 45 shots but I do delete as I go in quiet parts of the game.
Some of that is the lens itself, which may limit the light gain achievable with ISO adjustment. Light gathering gets sacrificed for compactness.
My old Sony Cybershot F707 has an f2 lens, whereas f2.8 or even f3.5 are common. That does make the lens larger than the camera body though.
Thanks fellas. A mate showed me this website: http://www.dpreview.com which has some great reviews and info about cameras. Fair to say I've learned a packet in the last few days.
ISO speed is a limiting factor in your point and shoot digitals, as is the aperture. The SLR's I'm looking at have ISO speeds up to 1600, but at those speed, the images are very soft and grainy, which I guess is a result of lack of light. I'd love to be able to take crisp action shots at night games, but the $'s involved is too prohibitive, but I guess it'll be an upgrade from the Sony.
Psyber, you must have spent a fortune getting an f2 lens. I'll be getting f3.5 as I can't afford anything smaller.