Monday, October 14, 2013

Tips for bringing DSLR camera on a flight?

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Qwerty


I'm planning on bringing my DSLR camera with only one lens on a domestic flight. I'm leaving the memory card and battery inside of the camera and I'm also bringing the charger.

Three questions:
1. Would I have to take my camera out of the camera bag, or would it depend on various things?
2. Would I have to turn my camera on, or would this also depend on something?
3. Do you have any essential tips to avoid unnecessary hassle/problems?

If you can answer any one of these questions, it would be appreciated. Stories of your experience with bringing a DSLR as carry-on would be great.



Answer
There are no hassles. Many people bring cameras. I have never seen any check point sign or read any regulations that say you need to take that kind of item out of you bag.

Laptops, CPAP machines, large gaming consoles or other large electronics do need to be removed, but not cameras.

There is no reason why they would ask you to turn it on. They can see from the x-ray image that there are only cameras parts inside.

The x-rays will not do anything to the camera or the card.

What are the different camera lenses and what do they do?




mommy2both


I think I am going to get the Cannon EOS 1000D (rebel XS). This will be my first DSLR camera. But Im not sure how many different lenses there are, what they are called, and what they all do.


Answer
There are well over 100 different lenses Canon makes for the XSi, and that doesn't even include lenses made by other companies.

Theses lenses can be broken down into four basic categories:

WIDE ANGLE: The human eye sees the same as roughly a 50mm lens. Wide angle lenses have focal lengths of less than 50mm. This means that looking through one of these lenses you'll see more than the human eye. These are good for landscapes, architecture and pictures of groups of people.

NORMAL: These lenses have focal lengths roughly in the 50-100mm range. They see approximately what the eye sees so they're good for subjects where proper perspective is essential. These lenses are good for portraits.

TELEPHOTO: These lenses have a focal length of over 100mm. They have "zoom". In other words, a bird far away will look closer.

SPECIALTY: These are lenses like fish-eye and macro.

Once you've categorized them by focal length, the differences come down to build quality, price, sharpness of the optics, and how well they perform in low light.

For a beginner like yourself, the 18-55mm kit lens will probably be fine. If you have the money you may also want to add a decent telephoto like the 70-300mm ($600). You may also want to pick up the 50mm f/1.8 for $100 as it does well in low light and will give you lots of background blur.




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