. I really want something a little versatile as I know I may end up not buying a second lens. Reply Mark on October 5, 2018 at 7:23 pm Thanks Marv. We’ll be publishing an indepth review of the a6500 soon, so you may want to hold out for that. The 28-70mm should be fine ...
so handholding a reasonably large and heavy 128mm equivalent lens without stabilisation inevitably results in a wobbly view when composing. Half-pressing the shutter on the A6500 starts-up the stabilisation with a very quiet whir and after about a ...
399 for the body, it seems a bit high for a camera that hasn’t really changed all that much over its 3-year-old predecessor. For current A6500 owners, it might not be worth it
The a6500 defaults to showing the blinking highlight alert during image review, which I find very useful (along with the histogram). This alert has a lower tolerance than Adobe Lightroom, meaning that if an area is just slightly blown out and flashing on the a6500 LCD screen, there may st...
Burst mode shooting in continuous high mode isgreat fun. This pocket powerhouse able to fire off 11 frames per second for around 22 frames in RAW format, and 49 frames in JPEG Fine format. Unlike theSony a6300and a6500, the a6000 doesn’t offer silent shooting, meaning that using burst ...
The dynamic range of the Fuji XT2 sensor is incredible. I cannot measure it precisely to give you the exact number of stops it covers but, based on my purely empirical experience; it is better than the Sony a6000, a6300, and a6500. In six weeks, I have not used HDR, even when shoot...
Why A6600? Good value second hand, bigger battery, and for me LAEA5 support for older lenses… If the A6300 had supported the LAEA5 I would have kept it. Great camera, but obviously AF keeps getting better (A6700 being state of the art, obviously, and at a price). ...
Sony A6500 Sony A6600 Sony A6700 Sony NEX-3 Sony NEX-3N Sony NEX-5 Sony NEX-5N Sony NEX-5R Sony NEX-5T Sony NEX-6 Sony NEX-7 Sony NEX-C3 Sony NEX-F3 Conversely, some Sony camerasdon't make it possible to (reliably) retrieve the shutter countfrom EXIF data. Here are some models...
If you're considering a second-hand or used camera, selecting one with a lower shutter count is essential, indicating the shutter has been actuated significantly below its limit. What is a 'good' shutter count? A "good" shutter count varies depending on the camera model. Entry-level and ...
I have no problem hand-holding down to 1/4 second at reasonable focal lengths with theSony 18-135mm OSS, so I don't see any point of paying more for theA6500to get additional in-body stabilization unless you're addicted to some other odd feature, like the M2 setting on the top dial...