Well, that is a problem indeed, in particular when we remember a small but 
noticeable number of K-5's came with sensor issues, and there is an also small 
but noticeable number of SDM lense failing too soon.

I don't expect a 100% rate of success from any kind of product, and I'd be 
quite happy to learn my problem is one in a very large number of successful 
sales - but if Larry wouldn't be checking the camera, I'd be discovering the 
problem only here in BR, and would face a much, much greater cost to return it. 
Not to mention the taxes involved - as the replacement camera would just be 
taxed too.

The Kr seems a very interesting camera indeed... 

Larry my friend, thank you very very much!!! Again!!!

Luiz Felipe
luiz.felipe at techmit.com.br
http://www.techmit.com.br/luizfelipe

starting copy
Luiz's K-r arrived today.  Once the batteries charged I got to play with it a 
bit.  The biggest annoyance was not being able to turn off the info screen, and 
not having how to do it easily findable in the manual. (camera menu 4, memory, 
save picture display). In every way it is an improvement on the K-x.  I still 
want a K-5, but if I could do so for a couple hundred dollars, I'd be very 
tempted to trade my K-x in for one. And you know how much I love my K-x.  The 
frame rate on autobracketing seems to be 2-3 times as fast.  Autofocus 
indicators were sorely missed. I haven't done side by sides to compare 12,800 
on the K-r with 6,400 on the K-x, but I wouldn't be surprised if they were 
pretty close. Autofocus seems a bit faster, and the autofocus light is a 
welcome help.

However, this unit is a sad example of the state of Pentax QC.  The thumbwheel 
is a bit flakey.  Most of the time, when it clicks, the appropriate value 
changes "one click" but it seems to miss clicks now and then. Sometimes one in 
10, sometimes two or three in a row.

Then when I was trying to take a photo of something on the covered bridge that 
was back lit, I tried to use the pop up flash.  Nada. I could get it to pop up, 
on auto, on manual, when it's dark enough to need a half second exposure, but 
still, no flash.  Two failures on one camera is beyond acceptable. I will 
concede the possibility that they could both be caused by the same loose 
connector, or faulty component, but that's a possibility, not a probability.
--
Larry Colen lrc at red4est.com sent from i4est


-- 
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
[email protected]
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow 
the directions.

Reply via email to