Absolutely awesome....
The camera feels slightly smaller than my K100D, but it feels WAY more solid (And I never felt my K100D was a slouch either!). Much more dense -probably because of the magnesium body adding to the weight. I could definitely knock someone out with a hit to the head using this cam. The ergonomics were also spot on and did a BETTER job than 100D imo (which I enjoyed as well). Things just fit nicer.
The AF in low light is beyond my K100D. This is not a "Af is slightly better" statement.
AF is CLEARLY better and this is without a doubt. I took it into some low light areas that I know my K100D would hunt for, and this guy just snapped without a problem. I even tried to throw some low contrast scenes on the AF point, and it would hunt for 1/3 of a turn and then lock. I was impressed. I was initially worried b/c the AF system was advertised as a "plus" version of the original system (which wasn't the greatest), but those fears exist no longer. Enough of a plus that things entirely different.
The camera was also much faster and extremely responsive. Take and pic and it instantly appears on the camera (I'm used to around 1/2 second delay). That goes to about 1/2-2 second delay if you turn on everything like autoleveling, distortion correction, etc etc that directly goes into processing.
Movie mode was also very well done. Pick your aperture and run with it. I had a lot of fun controlling where I was focused.
The composition mode is also much nicer than it seems. You could micro adjust and shift things about 20%*length of the frame.
Other things were very nice - the electronic level didn't just work horizontally, if you switch to portrait mode it adjusts to be a vertical electronic level. The digital filters were fun (A 'Holga\Lomo' mode) and suprisingly detailed. You could apply all the filters you want to the image. Then, later, if you want to see how you altered the photos you could go back and the camera willa ctually tell you what filters, and in what order you applied them. That attention to detail is pretttttty damned nice and really helps to make the package look good.
I like how almost everything is button driven. ISO has a button, aperture and shutter have their own wheels, WB, etc. etc. Teven the metering selection was dial controlled. This may exist on the K20D, but I only have a K100D for reference. Even the The only thing that was in the menu (although its not 'dug deep' in there, its just 1 level in) is the IS on/off function. I'm totally fine with that though because I rarely turn it off. I honestly would have rather had my IS button do something more useful.
The weather sealing was nice. I found out that the reason "Cold Resistance" got added was that they used a new material for the weather seals that didn't contract/expand and they found that they could use it in more extreme conditions without a problem. The K-7 has a greater number of seals, but that isn't because they did a "better job sealing"....its because the camera itself has more buttons, and thus it will have more seals to cover up those buttons.
I didn't focus on pixel peeping at all. Sorry about that
Again it was built like a tank. If you wanted it larger, the grip really expanded the size. I actually felt that, "dayum...the grip is nice!" and molded onto the camera very well. The buttons were also placed in very useful positions.
Oh and all the DA* lenses and the pancakes made me almost jizz in my pants. I need realllllly need to think about that DA35 Macro...that lens has some special magic in there.
Ned Bunnell, Pentax's president, was there casually talking and relaxing with everyone. John C. was also there (he posts on dpreview). Mark Dimalanta was there to give a nice presentation (And he really pushed how he could take it into any weather...and he had many shots were he just kept shooting even though it was pouring outside). It was nice to see the grass roots level outreach - and it was especially nice to freely access all the glass and play around with it.
I used to struggle about K-7 vs K-20...but now its a done deal. K-7 for sure. The attention to detail is just great. I'm probably not going to bite till the end of the year (unless I just really need my flash working and go crazy over it...then I'll bite lol)
Finally, they brought in a K-7 cut in half. That was awesome as well xD its amazing how densely packed everything is aside from the mounting area. Oh, and that pentaprism is fucking tight
Nice and big (Oh, pentamirror FTL now. I can't believe I'm shooting with such a dim viewfinder. 100% .92x is awesome, but of course is defeated by FF, but that is something APS will never get past
)
The camera feels slightly smaller than my K100D, but it feels WAY more solid (And I never felt my K100D was a slouch either!). Much more dense -probably because of the magnesium body adding to the weight. I could definitely knock someone out with a hit to the head using this cam. The ergonomics were also spot on and did a BETTER job than 100D imo (which I enjoyed as well). Things just fit nicer.
The AF in low light is beyond my K100D. This is not a "Af is slightly better" statement.
AF is CLEARLY better and this is without a doubt. I took it into some low light areas that I know my K100D would hunt for, and this guy just snapped without a problem. I even tried to throw some low contrast scenes on the AF point, and it would hunt for 1/3 of a turn and then lock. I was impressed. I was initially worried b/c the AF system was advertised as a "plus" version of the original system (which wasn't the greatest), but those fears exist no longer. Enough of a plus that things entirely different.
The camera was also much faster and extremely responsive. Take and pic and it instantly appears on the camera (I'm used to around 1/2 second delay). That goes to about 1/2-2 second delay if you turn on everything like autoleveling, distortion correction, etc etc that directly goes into processing.
Movie mode was also very well done. Pick your aperture and run with it. I had a lot of fun controlling where I was focused.
The composition mode is also much nicer than it seems. You could micro adjust and shift things about 20%*length of the frame.
Other things were very nice - the electronic level didn't just work horizontally, if you switch to portrait mode it adjusts to be a vertical electronic level. The digital filters were fun (A 'Holga\Lomo' mode) and suprisingly detailed. You could apply all the filters you want to the image. Then, later, if you want to see how you altered the photos you could go back and the camera willa ctually tell you what filters, and in what order you applied them. That attention to detail is pretttttty damned nice and really helps to make the package look good.
I like how almost everything is button driven. ISO has a button, aperture and shutter have their own wheels, WB, etc. etc. Teven the metering selection was dial controlled. This may exist on the K20D, but I only have a K100D for reference. Even the The only thing that was in the menu (although its not 'dug deep' in there, its just 1 level in) is the IS on/off function. I'm totally fine with that though because I rarely turn it off. I honestly would have rather had my IS button do something more useful.
The weather sealing was nice. I found out that the reason "Cold Resistance" got added was that they used a new material for the weather seals that didn't contract/expand and they found that they could use it in more extreme conditions without a problem. The K-7 has a greater number of seals, but that isn't because they did a "better job sealing"....its because the camera itself has more buttons, and thus it will have more seals to cover up those buttons.
I didn't focus on pixel peeping at all. Sorry about that
Again it was built like a tank. If you wanted it larger, the grip really expanded the size. I actually felt that, "dayum...the grip is nice!" and molded onto the camera very well. The buttons were also placed in very useful positions.
Oh and all the DA* lenses and the pancakes made me almost jizz in my pants. I need realllllly need to think about that DA35 Macro...that lens has some special magic in there.
Ned Bunnell, Pentax's president, was there casually talking and relaxing with everyone. John C. was also there (he posts on dpreview). Mark Dimalanta was there to give a nice presentation (And he really pushed how he could take it into any weather...and he had many shots were he just kept shooting even though it was pouring outside). It was nice to see the grass roots level outreach - and it was especially nice to freely access all the glass and play around with it.
I used to struggle about K-7 vs K-20...but now its a done deal. K-7 for sure. The attention to detail is just great. I'm probably not going to bite till the end of the year (unless I just really need my flash working and go crazy over it...then I'll bite lol)
Finally, they brought in a K-7 cut in half. That was awesome as well xD its amazing how densely packed everything is aside from the mounting area. Oh, and that pentaprism is fucking tight