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- Feb 28, 2003
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- Friday
Same number of pixels covering a larger sensor means more light per pixel. That means better low light performance & faster auto-focus.
True - but disk space it cheap, cheap, cheap...Meh.... all it's doing is taking up more hard-disc space for RAW files.
But, look through the D600 viewfinder, and you'll see a much brighter image.
Why is that? Just because of the full frame?
I must wave the Skip Hunt wand at this
I noticed that the view finder coverage on the D600 is not great compared to even the D7000. Does that matter to most folks when composing shots? I would think that would get annoying.
I'm confused here. The D600 has 100% viewfinder coverage in FX mode. I guess it only has 97% in DX mode, but you can still see exactly what you are composing because all the DX mode does is put a cropped box inside the viewfinder.
On a side note, I really don't understand the whole DX mode thing anyway on a FX body. Why not just shoot in FX and crop. Can anyone explain the advantage of the actual DX mode over cropping to that?