The most consistent reviews feedback we get from readers is they want more of them. And as with the new (ish) suite of studio tests that you'll see in current reviews we're committed to finding ways of speeding up the entire process while continuing to deliver value. Point being - those middle pages that made us 'unique' were severely underperforming in terms of traffic, and took an age to put together. Shooting a single test chart allows us to demonstrate noise, sharpness, resolution, Raw/JPEG differences, dynamic range and high ISO image quality, for example. It's easy to miss (and a lot of people do) but our studio test widget stands in for several standalone 'middle' pages, that we used to create laboriously in the past. Hopefully our recent reviews (the T6 review is an unusually short one, but this reflects its market position and specification) are easier to digest. Our goal is to continue to include this information, but present it in a different way. But if that's what you're going for the body is only one part of a big equation you need to be looking at. Sure, the T6 should be cheaper and Pentax has a lot of room to grow. Not telling anyone what to buy, but a dose of reality needs to be added to paper specs. And dynamic range, who cares? The VAST majority of users in this range will have people looking at their photos on a blown out monitor anyway. But yeah, don't why it was an "option delete" on the T6. What's the actual USABLE top end why do many folks seem to think sensor cleaning is the best thing since sliced bread? I never had a problem with specks showing up on the XT or XTi (can't remember what one I had). I have a T1i and I think the lens needs to be opened to f2.8 or better.ĥ1k ISO? ROFL. Pentaprism w/o 100% coverage VF !!?!?!?! NO FREAKING DEAL MAN!!!! (I kid of course)ĩ out of 11 AF points being cross type is pretty nice, but what lenses make that feature come alive? That's an honest question. But one of the T6's headline features isn't on the inside of the camera at all, it's written on the outside of the box: that sweet $500 price tag with lens. Battery life is a very respectable 500 shots per charge, putting it near the top of its class in that respect. It offers a 9-point AF module, 1080/30p video and built-in Wi-Fi with NFC. Its closest competitor in the category is the Nikon D3300, which was announced in January 2014 and is getting a little long in the tooth at this point.Īs per Rebel tradition, the T6 packages up some tech borrowed from previous-generation higher end models, and that's no bad thing. Built around an 18MP APS-C sensor, the T6 offers Wi-Fi with NFC for easy photo sharing when you’re out-and-about, and adds a faster processor compared to its predecessor, the Rebel T5. The Canon EOS Rebel T6 / 1300D is an entry-level DSLR targeted toward first-time ILC users and smartphone upgraders.
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