ENART.HZFQ.COM
welcome to my space
X
NAVIGATION - HOME
Search:  
Indoor Sports Photography
Published by: webmaster 2010-03-15
  • I currently own a Olympus CZ2100 UltraZoom. Awesome camera but.... my son plays basketball and I would like to be able to take indoor action shots of him playing but with a ISO limit of 400 all I get is a blur.
    So, I am looking for a SLR that will meet my needs as they appear to offer higher ISO's to help me accomplish my goal. It appears 1600 and 3200 are available.
    Question?? - Will 1600 be enough for high speed action indoors while using a zoom lens ( mayb eup to 300m ),to focus on the action or do I need 3200 in my back pocket.

    I am looking at the following camera's ( in my price range ), any input would be appreciated !
    Pentax *ist DS - 3200 ISO
    Canon RebelXT - 1600 ISO
    Nikon D70S - 1600ISO


  • You might want to take a look at the 10D. While it technically has been discontinued by Canon. They can be found inexpensively on eBay, all of the accessories are readily available and the camera can go to 3200 ISO. Depending on the gym that you're shooting in (some can be rather dark), you'll want a higher ISO and a faster lens. Most of the pros shoot indoor sports with remote strobes so without those, you'll need all the help you can get.


  • Yes, I had a question about that specifically. The spec. indicates ISO 80 - 1600, 3200 with ISO extension. What does this mean ?


  • Yes, I had a question about that specifically. The spec. indicates ISO 80 - 1600, 3200 with ISO extension. What does this mean ?

    That just means that ISO 3200 is not a normal setting. There is a custom function that has to be turned on before you can set the camera to ISO 3200. It's not hard to do.


  • Yes, besides a higher ISO...a faster lens would be the other way to get faster shutter speeds. Besides, bumping up the ISO adds noise to the images...although a good DSLR will give you less noise at 800 or 1600, than your point & shoot at 200 or 400.

    Something that can open up to F4 would be a start...but to really do the job F2.8 or faster would be the way to go.

    Unfortunately, a long lens that also has a large aperture (fast lens)...will be expensive. I think the Canon 300mm F4 is around $1100 US...and they go up from there. So if indoor sports is your focus....keep in mind that expensive lenses go with that territory. Not to mention the cost of the camera itself.





  • What kind of aggressive tropical freshwater fish go together? I want a ghost fish, African cichlids etc?
    Desktop background not showing well?
    PRINT Add to favorites
  • still riding the rate cut wave
  • broadcasters slam google microsoft in spectrum spat
  • biztalk server r2 ships with soa flavor
  • stocks shake off brief slump
  • market slows after 2 day rally
  • it departments giving vista the cold shoulder
  • demo till you drop
  • lawmakers float voip based 911 bill
  • stocks rise ahead of jobs report
  • tiers of trust to offer ids in a crisis
  • netscout gets network general for 205m
  • technical analysis the pressure s on
  • culture clash in office 2 0
  • tech joins fed cut joy
  • amd plans triple core desktop processor

  • intel helps stocks a little
  • consumer survey lifts stocks
  • techs lag blue chip rally
  • court upholds juniper patent victory
  • stocks plunge as job market weakens
  • doj investigating flash disk vendors
  • tomorrownow incident brings scrutiny to sap oracle
  • stocks sluggish on eve of fed decision
  • oracle shatters 1q estimates
  • technical analysis market faces a big test
  • ti toes the line
  • tech rally undone by blue chips
  • technical analysis bulls come up short
  • same patent fight new patent challenges

  • About us |Contact us |Advertisement |Site map |Exchange links
    Copyright© 2008enart.hzfq.com All Rights Reserved