Just a quick tip to any potential UK purchasers who may be using Argos, (the camera is currently at £420.00 on their website) the featured Fujifilm camera bag will not take the HS50 so do not go for the offer that includes it. I already have this camera bag and I've tried getting the camera in it. I've finished up buying a DSLR bag to house the beast!
only last week I missed the chance of a male Hen Harrier within 100 metres of me because the auto-focus failed to lock-on fast enough, it left me with a blurred throw-away image. .
cracking images Joms, how are you liking your new HS50 ? Iwish we had your natural light levels here in the UK .
We dream of ISO100 over here.Looking forward to seeing some more !:t:
My only experience of the Fujifilm HS50 was giving it a 'check over' at the Focus on Imaging show at the NEC in Birmingham, earlier this month.
First impressions were very favourable, the autofocus lived up to Fuji's claim that it is the fastest currently available on any Bridge Camera, it locked on to any target I choose overhead (where the light was rather poor!) quickly with no hunting discernable. In macro mode the camera also seemed capable and the vari-angle lcd is a massive help here. The lcd is top-notch, playback appears lovely and clear.
The one over-riding impression that has stayed with me though is the camera's high quality, I compared it to all the latest bridge camera rival brands; Nikon, Canon, Panasonic, Sony etc, the Fujifilm HS50 just made them all look rather 'cheap' and plasticky.
The camera is also one of the largest currently offered only being surpassed by the Fuji S-X1, that said it's still a very nice camera in the hand and I felt comfortable with it from the off.
I currently use the Panasonic Lumix FZ150 but I've been rather disappointed with the speed of auto-focus, only last week I missed the chance of a male Hen Harrier within 100 metres of me because the auto-focus failed to lock-on fast enough, it left me with a blurred throw-away image. The HS50 appears to overcome these problems, it also has the extra reach of 1000mm over the FZ150 600mm.
I'm looking forward to seeing some good 'outdoor' images posted here and I then might just invest in the HS50 once the price moves down from its rather steep 'new model price'.
...the autofocus lived up to Fuji's claim that it is the fastest currently available on any Bridge Camera, it locked on to any target I choose overhead (where the light was rather poor!) quickly with no hunting discernable.
...I'm looking forward to seeing some good 'outdoor' images posted here and I then might just invest in the HS50 once the price moves down from its rather steep 'new model price'.
Hi Whimbrel, Do you mean you were focusing on bits inside the NEC roof, or did you get a chance to aim at birds in flight? I'm guessing the former! Most images posted here so far demonstrate very fast autofocus at 'garden' range, but I'd really like to know how the camera might handle, say harriers or buzzards in flight, at full zoom at 50-100 metre range. My FZ45 is so painfully slow most of the time. That speed, combined with decent image quality, is what I'm looking for. It would be nice if it could refocus between shots in a burst (as the FZ200 is supposed to) but, if I read the manual right, it cannot.
Brian
We need good light and decent weather so that all the HS50 owners on this thread can get out and show us what the camera is really capable of.
I'm not sure that i understand why you would find bird shots taken buried in a tangle of twigs acceptable ?Actually, Whimbrel, I would like to see more of what the HS50 can do with its autofocus in dim conditions. I'm not seeing many photos of birds that are buried in a dark tangle of twigs as I so often run into and have difficulty getting my P&S camera to focus on. For my goals, that would be a better test of what the camera can do. Though, I agree, being able to clearly capture flying birds is certainly a plus. Not something I hardly ever attempt with my old Canon.
Steve
I'm not sure that i understand why you would find bird shots taken buried in a tangle of twigs acceptable ?
I'd reject any image that wasn't at least a reasonable record shot. its all very well saying I have a shot of a rare bird taken in my garden or whatever but frankly if you cannot see the bird for twigs and foliage and the image is taken at 1/80 ISO 1600 in the dark its useless anyway.
What you are asking for would probably defeat the ability of a top level DSLR camera costing $thousands let alone a cheap P&S superzoom .
Lets get realistic here people please.
All the shots you see that I have taken on this thread in the past 2x weeks and on my Flickr account have been taken in the UK in very low light levels. Some of them in a rain and hail storm but all of them taken with absolutely zero sky showing. Overcast and dark .
We are under water here with severe flooding , snow drifts and people dying in their cars :C and you want us to faff about taking ridiculous pictures in that ?
Earleybird, old chap, might be better for other interested parties if you could resist your tendency to be so heavy-handed and insulting to other posters. I can think of at least three BF members to whom you've been needlessly ill-mannered and who I'd guess will be unlikely to make more contributions to your threads. Just remember this is a public space, not your personal domain.
Not exactly a small bird in a bush but I think the camera's autofocus did a good job on this moorhen.
f6.4 at 1/30 iso 200
If the weather round here picks up on Wednesday I hope to get out for the day with the camera and play around a bit. I'll try to get a few shots of small passerines in bushes.