Well, I agree totally with Photog, and he summed up exactly what
I was posting about regarding off road durability in the body's. I have pushed my 20D to the max on an indoor sports shoot, but for everything else, it's been more than I need. I would like a 40D simply for the larger screen on the back, the mildly improved menus, and the self cleaning sensor, but none of those factors are worth plunking down serious cash for right now. I am getting quite adept at cleaning my own sensor, and have a nice large screen monitor at home, so who needs one on the camera anyway
For Super Doody or whoever else is still reading this forum, I wrote a bit about how I maxed out the 20D on my blog. This might be useful reading if you think you will be shooting in similar environs. Otherwise, the 20D will make a great first camera. It's simple, powerful, durable, and flexible, allowing you to use a variety of lenses. It's great on battery length too. I can shoot over 800 px without even thinking about battery charging.
Here is the blog post about the indoor sports event:
http://blog.nextstepdesigns.com/?p=54
70-200mm f2.8L with 1.4x extender:
ThomD: How are you liking the 70-300DO? I LOVE my 70-200 F2.8L, it is by far the crispest tool in my bag, but the compact DO lens has some usefullness that I could use. Is it dust proof? I have a few EF and EF-S lenses, and with the exception of my 10-22mm, they all are filled with dust from the trail. Now I shoot ultra wide or superzoom all the time, I don't have that middle range. My day to day lens is the new 16-35mm F2.8L MkII, which I really like. It's *almost* as sharp as my 70-200 F2.8L
16-35mm F2.8L MkII shot:
ThomD said:
Good point Photog, I forgot we started with the question of "Entry Level".
You, me and Michael Reichmann can whine about no ML button, but Canon don't care.
Here's where I'm at - had a 1D2, a handful of "typical" L lenses, filters, flash, etc, - the whole kit. One burgulary later I had nada. I went for about a year on a Pany FZ-50. Tried to live without an SLR, but got tired of the noise. OTOH, that long reach was addicitve and for outside, good light shots, it is hard to beat the convenience.
I decided the 1 series was too heavy, so now I'm trying an experiment in minimalism - 40D, 70-300DO and 17-55 (and the flash and the tripod, etc,etc). We'll see how it goes this summer. I miss my 70-200/2.8 I loved that lens because it was like parting the Red Sea in a crowd: Mom to daughter - "Honey step aside so the photographer can get a good shot."