Vacant dwelling, arrived about 20 minutes into the job
After having problems with both of my cameras on the previous night, I did some assessing. The Olympus E-5 cameras that I have been using (2 bodies, Zuiko 14-35 and 35-100 zoom lenses-f2.0 across entire zoom) were not performing to my standards. One was experiencing issues with the auto focus that could not be corrected manually as well as the internal battery apparently being dead, resulting in having to re-enter the date every time the external battery was changed and the other randomly changing from Manual mode to Program mode while shooting.
I have always been impressed with the Olympus line, especially the lenses. I was converted by Bob Mitts in 2001 watching him shoot with a C4040 Zoom which I immediately went out and bought and eventually progressed to an E300, E520, E3 and eventually the E5. The 4/3 system seemed like it had great potential with a 2x factor effectively giving double the focal length of a full frame camera but never really seemed to catch on. I knew that Olympus got out of the camera game last year and while researching the problems I was having, I realized that the E5 was introduced in 2010-really old technology by today's standards.
I started looking at alternatives. Photography is not a cheap hobby. I have been following the progression of cameras and wanted a mirrorless, full frame camera that could perform in low light. Knowing that I was going to spend a good amount to get that, I started researching and decided on a Sony Alpha A7 III with a 28-70 f3.5-5.6 zoom lens. On the Best Buy site there were over 600 reviews with a consumer rting of 4.9/5 stars anda professional rating of 4.8/5 stars. I made the plunge, did some quick familiarization and headed out.
This was the only fire I caught and I obviously have a lot of experimenting to do, but I'm impressed.
28mm, f4.5, 1/20 sec, ISO 1000
After having problems with both of my cameras on the previous night, I did some assessing. The Olympus E-5 cameras that I have been using (2 bodies, Zuiko 14-35 and 35-100 zoom lenses-f2.0 across entire zoom) were not performing to my standards. One was experiencing issues with the auto focus that could not be corrected manually as well as the internal battery apparently being dead, resulting in having to re-enter the date every time the external battery was changed and the other randomly changing from Manual mode to Program mode while shooting.
I have always been impressed with the Olympus line, especially the lenses. I was converted by Bob Mitts in 2001 watching him shoot with a C4040 Zoom which I immediately went out and bought and eventually progressed to an E300, E520, E3 and eventually the E5. The 4/3 system seemed like it had great potential with a 2x factor effectively giving double the focal length of a full frame camera but never really seemed to catch on. I knew that Olympus got out of the camera game last year and while researching the problems I was having, I realized that the E5 was introduced in 2010-really old technology by today's standards.
I started looking at alternatives. Photography is not a cheap hobby. I have been following the progression of cameras and wanted a mirrorless, full frame camera that could perform in low light. Knowing that I was going to spend a good amount to get that, I started researching and decided on a Sony Alpha A7 III with a 28-70 f3.5-5.6 zoom lens. On the Best Buy site there were over 600 reviews with a consumer rting of 4.9/5 stars anda professional rating of 4.8/5 stars. I made the plunge, did some quick familiarization and headed out.
This was the only fire I caught and I obviously have a lot of experimenting to do, but I'm impressed.
28mm, f4.5, 1/20 sec, ISO 1000