I don't own a GR II, but I have a Nikon Coolpix A which is very similar and I like it a lot. The A has specs & capabilities of a D7xxx series SLR but with a compact, mirrorless body and finely-tuned fixed lens. The leaf shutter is absolutely silent and allows for flash sync at all shutter speeds; up to 1/2000s IIRC. Image quality is fantastic, especially the OOC jpegs. Shooting with an optical viewfinder (an accessory available for both the GRII and A) changes the experience for the better... composing a shot on a fixed LCD backscreen is my least favorite ergonomic of digital photography.
My fanboyism might be showing, but another sleeper is the P340. It's sort of a 'miniature' version of the A with many more bells and whistles in terms of capabilities, albeit the with the dreaded fixed LCD.
I'm very interested in the GR Digital and GR series, but frankly I'm a bit wary given the high cost and the number of problems I read about with these cameras. These aren't exactly known as the most durable and longlasting cameras in the world, so I'm hesitant to buy a used one, and I've also read Ricoh's U.S. service is difficult to deal with.
Kind of ironic I worry a lot less buying a 50 year old film camera than I would buying a 5 year old digital.
I actually bought the Ricoh GR Digital II. I didn't know the difference between that and the regular GR II or that there was such a thing. It, of course, has a small sensor at 10 megapixels. I see good reviews on it and the price was right, so I can't complain. The A that you have does compare well to the GR II.
Do the regular GR's suffer from this control wheel failure or just the Digital models?
Not that I'm aware of, but it could be that most of the ones out there don't have enough mileage on them yet. The problem I've seen mentioned most often in discussions about the APS-C GR cameras is dust on the sensor, though the GR's are certainly not the only fixed-lens compacts with that issue.
You’d think a fixed lens camera could keep dust off the sensor.
I would really like a smaller alternative to a dslr, but I’m not going to buy a $1,500 disposable camera. Is there anything decent new or used in the $300-500 range?
"Fixed lens" compacts often have retractable lenses with sliding barrel components that are harder to seal. But there are also compacts with fully rigid mounts that have had problems.
Depending on your focal length preferences, you might look at the smallest mirrorless cameras. Original EOS M, M2 or M100/M200 with 22 EF-M pancake. Olympus E-PL series or Panasonic GF/GX/GM series with compact m4/3 lens of your choice. Any of the non-viewfinder Nikon 1 series cameras with the 10mm pancake. The smaller Sony NEX/alpha APS-C cameras with either 16 or 20mm pancake.
Also, FWIW, the EOS SL1 with 24 EF-S pancake is a really small DSLR - you might be surprised just how small if you've never handled one - though not pocketable in the way the smallest mirrorless cameras are.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?