Konica Minolta DiMage 7Hi 4 to 5 Megapixel
Konica Minolta DiMage 7Hi 4 to 5 Megapixel
USER REVIEWS
[Dec 09, 2003]
Sergio
Expert
Strength:
Optics and picture control. You see what you get on the excellent viewfinder, so no surprises with very difficult photos like sunsets etc.
Weakness:
Does not seem to be very sturdy. On the 3rd mounth the front cover of the grip went loose, and after I lost the rubber eypiece. Very happy with the optics and the amount of (easy) control on colour, contrast, EV etc.. Customer Service For the first problem waited 1 month but they gave me a replacement Dimage. For the lost eypiece I did'nt bother yet... Similar Products Used: Sold them ! |
[Jun 22, 2003]
dgunzel
Intermediate
Strength:
Lens Features 28-200 optical zoom Fully programmable to fully manual operation Through the lens EVF (see also weakness) Ability to add on filters, supplemental lenses
Weakness:
As with all cameras this class--battery life--just be smart and be prepared. EVF--not true through the lens but (up until recently) digital SLRs have been consideralby more pricey. If you are already shooting Canon or Nikon AF systems, and have a bevy of lenses, you would probably be better off spending the money on one of those systems; but, if not...Minolta is the winner. I have always been a Minolta user. When it came to this purchase, however, I through all loyalty out the window and did research on all the similar models including Nikon 5700 (and lesser models), Olympus Camedia E20 & 10 (?), and Sony. I was looking for 5 megpixel and above but budget constraints prohibited true digital SLR. After reviewing all, the Minolta won--mainly because of the reviews of the lens. The all have similar features and are similarly priced. I recently attended a workshop in Santa Fe and we toured The Image House, a high end digital print lab (Epson 9600 x 3) producing fine art prints for many well known as well as the common joe-blow photographers. According to Don Gray, owner of Image House--pixel count is not nearly as important as lens quality as far as quality of image. All that I have read, the Minolta has an excellant lens. Yes, there is a learning curve, but it is not all that difficult and the camera is absolutely packed with features--form totally manual (lets hear it for manual exposure) to fully programmable w/ both shutter and aperture priority modes. The 28-200 optical zoom with macro modes at both ends of the zoom takes gret shots. Battery life: if you use the LCD on the back, battery life is shorter. So, buy rechargable batteries--it takes 4 AA. Buy two sets and you will be fine. A better alternative--I found an add-on rechargable LiIon battery pack that mounts onto the tripod mount. This is very convenient and will give you 100+ RAW images befor needing to be recharged (again based on usual use of the EVF rather than the LCD). Don't rely on the electronic viewfinder for color/contrast. Trust yourself. Use it to compose, frame, and for general exposure settings. You will find that what you see by eye is what you will get. Customer Service no experience--no problems |
[May 30, 2003]
ricer
Intermediate
Strength:
- 28-200 GT lens (great range and lens quality) - Mechanical zoom ring (surely better than the electronic zoom which is slow, noisy, and inaccurate) - selectable viewfinder screen: e.g. grip, scale..which helps a lot for critical composition - great autofocus speed (far better than D60); - multi focusing points (great for critical focusing such as macro photography. - Light weight but solid built
Weakness:
Noise level I used Canon D60 with L lens before. The photo quality is great but it is bulky and the auto-focus is a nightmare. I sold it finally and want to get a small, light, but still give me a pro-feel camera. Yes, 7Hi is the case. Customer Service not used yet. Similar Products Used: D60 (sold), Pentax 330, other Canon film camera and lens |