| Re: Are there any posts on the Fuji S5? I think you are correct that the screen is slow to view on raw. Even on jpg fine, it is slower than I'm used to with the Canons, but I am not an LCD watcher. I never look at histograms and only check the screen if it's a situation I'm not sure of. I'm just too set in my ways from film and the first few generations of DSLRs that were pretty ugly on LCD quality. I did notice that the Fuji LCD was a nice size, but some shots that did not look good on the LCD were excellent on the computer.
I am not a raw shooter. I think everyone here knows that by now. That was my number one reason by far to get the S5. Up to now, I've been forced to shoot raw in church interiors, most receptions, etc. On anything else, I shoot jpg and am very happy with the results, but once again, I shoot manual exposure, pre-set WB and they are always on the money, except as noted. I read a post a month ago from a wedding shooter I repect a great deal that said he would have slammed someone who shot jpg until he tried it himself with the S5.
For sports action, I would stay with a higher end Nikon or Canon. I think this camera is not rugged or fast enough for this. I found the focus to be slightly slower than I would like and the burst speeds are below what a good sports shooter needs.
There have been a few posts that the Fuji is a bit soft on focus. Since everything I use this for will be people pictures, this is not a deal breaker for me. I rarely use any sharpening on my Canon stuff.
Later Tuesday or Wednesday, I'll post a few samples on the company web site. I would rather post the original, unaltered file and I'm not inclined to take up Drew's bandwidth for that - plus, not sure how to do it anyway. I'll post the exact web address once Linda gets a chance to add it to our site Tuesday.
I have not handled the D200, but all the comments I've read are similar to yours - the S5 is slower, but better with tonal range, auto WB and skin color. Compared to the 5D, I doubt it will be nearly as good at high ISO. I went up to 800 and felt comfortable. For action sports indoors, you'll need more than that. I'm still waiting for the next Canon version to achieve the best of both worlds. Maybe, maybe not.
Doug |