I own the 28-80mm cannon lens and the 75-300mm cannon lens.  My picture are
all over the spectrum.  Averything from scenery and wildlife to family
pictures at get togethers and pictures of people and things.  I was thinking
of trading my 28-80 in for the cannon 28-105, and trading in my 75-300 for a
300mm f2.8 prime lens, then upgrading my Elan II to a better body.  Right
now I shoot 'regular' colour film, but I am trying to get into shooting more
balck and whit (and processing my own film too), and would also like to try
slide film.

How will I benifit from the 1/3 stop apperature speed as opposed to the 1/2
stop apperature speed?
How is the 1v overkill as opposed to the 1n or the EOS 3 or the Elan 7?


----- Original Message -----
From: "John Chennavasin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2001 10:17 PM
Subject: Re: EOS camera body


> on 4/15/01 12:06 AM, Jason Lay ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
>
> > I have been reading a lot of the posts and have heard many things about
> > different cannon cameras.  I own and Elan II right now, and would like
to
> > upgrade to a better camera.  It doesn't necessarily have to be a newer
> > camera.  I understand the the Elan7 is the newer version of the Elan II,
but
> > there is also the 1n, the 1v, the A2, and the EOS 3.  I want my camera
to be
> > a performer.  Anyone that has some insight into the different cameras
that
> > would like to give me some feedback from the perspective of having used
the
> > cameras would be greatly appreciated.  I have read the Cannon website
for
> > the specifications, but I want to know how they perform in real life.
>
> Which lenses do you currently own, and what kind of pictures do you take?
>
> If you shoot slide film, you may find the 1/3 stop aperture and shutter
> speed adjustment on the 1n, 1v, and 3 to be more helpful (it's 1/2 stop on
> other bodies).
>
> The 1v is overkill unless you own one of the new image-stablized
> super-telephoto lenses. It's really designed for sports and wildlife
> photographers.
>
> The shutter release(s) on the 1n, 1v, and 3 has a much better feel. On
these
> cameras, the shutter release has a progressive spring that makes it
> virtually impossible to accidentally take the picture if you are pressing
> the shutter release halfway down to lock the exposure (or focus).
>
> If you don't own an L-series or a decent prime lens, you may consider
buying
> one of these first. These will help you get the most out of your pictures.
>
> --
> John Chennavasin  | This article contains material which may inform and
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] | may be quoted, printed, forwarded, or redistributed
> www.fobpro.com    | as long as the original attribution remains intact.
>



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