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14th February 2016, 12:32 PM
#1
Travelling Podologist
Useful Photo help for beginners?
2006 4.2TDi ex-Telstra Remote area Camper. 425w roof mounted solar, 360Ah Aux batts, BCDC1240, Onboard hot & cold pressurised & filtered water, (25 litre hot water calorifier), ARB fridge, ARB freezer, Built in kitchen, heaps of easy access storage, 240v, 3” Genie exhaust + dynotune, 2” lift, 3900kg GVM upgrade, second glovebox, ROH Blaktrak steel wheels, Bridgestone D697's (now Toyo RT's), Redarc gauges/pillarpod, Hema HX-1, Icom 450 CB, dual rear view cameras, Onboard 30amp Victron mains charger, second glovebox, dual seat conversion, TPMS, Boss PX7 onboard air with 9 litre tank, 350w inverter, Steel bullbar, Harrop Eaton diff lock (front), Warn winch, Snorkel, Dual spares , 160 litre water tank, 180 litre fuel in two tanks (approx 1200km range) 2010 Tvan Tanami. (incl another 70 litre water tank) with matching wheels/tyres (& 3rd spare)
A Nomadic Life (Blog)
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BigRAWesty (14th February 2016), Bush Ranger (28th March 2016), Hodge (14th February 2016), MudRunnerTD (14th February 2016), NissanGQ4.2 (14th February 2016), ova50 (14th February 2016), Rossco (14th February 2016), TPC (14th February 2016), Wine_maker (15th February 2016)
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14th February 2016 12:32 PM
# ADS
Circuit advertisement
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14th February 2016, 03:54 PM
#2
Patrol God
Nice find Cuppa. Going to print this out and throw it in the Nikon bag.
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14th February 2016, 04:20 PM
#3
Hardcore
Mmm, with regard to the ISO, its not for beginners , as its not really teaching you anything about what ISO does or is useful for, its more just suggesting that you should never use anything above 100, or you will have grain in your pics, this is just not true at all.
Plus I think the ISO graph is a way out for any camera sold these days, mine was released 2008, so its quite a dinosaur, i shoot most stuff at around 320 ISO, to be honest ive never seen any grain in anything below 400 ISO, and gee, 50 ISO !..... mine wont even go below 100 ISO ....... and the newer DSLRs that go down to 50 ISO are so much better again in those higher ranges.
I say burn the card, and get out with your camera and learn what it can do by using it and playing around, it don't cost nuffin but a bit of time
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The Following 7 Users Say Thank You to 04OFF For This Useful Post:
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