Pentax 645z raw files download
As digital cameras have always offered the unique ability to instantly change the sensitivity, it's surprising that Pentax are still one of the few manufacturers to allow you to use ISO in this way. At the base of the shooting mode dial is a switch for selecting one of the three available metering modes. This has a third setting, which by default activates the traditional Depth of Field Preview function, stopping down the lens so that you can see the effect of your chosen aperture.
Located in front of the shutter button is one of the e-dials, predominately used to change the shutter speed, while behind it are the Exposure Compensation and ISO buttons - these commonly-used functions are ideally located for easy access. Pentax have incorporated a traditional top LCD panel which displays a comprehensive amount of information about the current camera settings, including the shooting mode, current aperture or shutter speed, flash mode, battery level, number of remaining frames and drive mode.
A similar amount of settings are also displayed in the viewfinder. In addition, when you turn the Z on or change the shooting mode, a graphical overview of how that mode operates is briefly displayed on the rear LCD screen.
The Pentax Z does a very good job of providing easily understood information about the settings that it's using. The viewfinder is bright and free of any distortions or aberrations, making it suitable for both auto and manual focusing. It also features a Natural-Bright-Matte III focusing screen to improve focusing accuracy during manual-focus operation. The in-finder status LCD runs horizontally along the bottom and it shows most of the camera's key settings.
On the rear of the Z is a the large 3. The Z's LCD screen has a very high resolution of 1,K dots, wide viewing angle and it's gapless design helps it to remains visible outdoors in all but the brightest of conditions, making it one of the better LCD screens that we've seen.
The brightness, saturation and colour temperature of the screen can be modified if you think it doesn't match that of your calibrated computer monitor.
The rear screen also doubles as a comprehensive status display, which can be called up by pressing the OK or Info buttons in record mode. If you then press the Info button again, you can also change all the settings right on the screen using a combination of the navigation pad and the rear e-dial.
This ingenious solution spares you the pain of having to enter the menu, and makes most setting changes via the LCD screen very simple. Located to the left and right of the optical viewfinder are handy dials for setting the auto-focus type and live view mode respectively. An innovative interval movie mode captures a series of 4K-resolution movie clips x pixels at a fixed interval.
The maximum size of a single video clip is either 4 gigabytes or 25 minutes. There's a built-in microphone for stereo recording and a socket for connecting an external stereo microphone. You can adjust the audio recording level manually and monitor sound levels during microphone recording. You can autofocus during movie recording, but unfortunately you can't set the aperture from the camera during recording, only before, so you will want to use lenses that have an aperture ring if possible.
The Z can be set to Auto Aperture Control, which removes the flexibility of being able to set the aperture yourself but at least enables the camera to change it during recording to suit the subject matter. The shutter speed cannot be set by the user in movie mode either, so you will have to rely on the camera's auto-exposure system while filming.
To engage Live View for stills, you have to set the switch to the Camera icon, then press the red LV button. You can use the Live View mode to hold the Z at arm's length or mount the camera on a tripod, with a single press of the LV button on the rear displaying the current scene on the LCD screen.
Focusing is achieved by pressing the small AF button on the rear of the camera or by half-pressing the shutter-button. Alternatively you can use manual focus in Live View mode, with up to 10x magnification available via the OK button to help you fine-tune the focus you can also use the OK button to magnify the subject by up to 10x when Auto Focus is on. Most of the main camera settings are displayed in Live View, including a helpful electronic level that helps to keep your horizons straight.
You can change the aperture, shutter speed, exposure compensation, ISO speed and a number of other settings when Live View is activated. Live View is fine for use with stationary subjects, but forget it if you want to track a moving subject.
The AF system in Live View mode takes a couple of seconds to lock onto the subject, making it much better suited to subjects that don't move. The Face Recognition AF mode works quite well, as promised quickly identifying up to 16 people in the frame, but again it takes a couple of seconds to lock onto a non-moving subject. More impressively Live View can be used in the continuous shooting mode with no restrictions on the 3fps rate, as the Z sets the mirror to the lock-up position. Located to the right of the LCD screen are the rear e-dial, mainly used for changing the aperture, with an AE-L button on the far right, handily placed for locking the exposure.
Underneath is a rather innocuous looking button with a small green dot that's unique to Pentax cameras. It has two uses - firstly, when shooting in Manual mode, a single push of the green button allows you to instantly set the correct exposure for the subject, as calculated by the camera, useful if you need a starting point for your own exposure.
Secondly, the Z offers a Hyper Program function which instantly switches to either the Shutter-Priority or Aperture-Priority mode from the Program mode, simply by turning either of the control dials on the grip. Pressing the Green button then returns to the Program mode. Impressively 25 of these are cross-type sensors positioned in the middle, with the centre sensor and two sensors just above and below it designed to detect the light flux of an F2. In Playback mode this allows you to toggle between the dual SD cards.
The red LV button turns the Z's Live View mode on and off in capture mode, doubling up as the Delete button when playing back your images, with a self-explanatory Play button alongside. Thankfully you will only have to set about half of the settings once and can then forget about them.
The menu system has a fairly logical tabbed system with five main tabs, Camera, Movie, Playback, Set-Up and Custom Setting, each divided into several sub-pages, and it's easily readable with a bright display and a large font size making it perfectly visible even in low light.
Turn it on via the main menu option and the Z automatically compensates for camera shake, which is a slight blurring of the image that typically occurs at slow shutter speeds, providing approximately 3 shutter steps of compensation. The Z displays a blur icon in the viewfinder to warn you that camera-shake may occur, regardless of whether or not Shake Reduction is on.
If you do still notice any dust, there's a neat feature called Dust Alert which is designed to show exactly where the dust is on the image sensor.
While this feature won't prevent dust from getting onto the sensor, it does provide a quick and easy way of checking for it.
In addition Dust Removal can be set to activate whenever the camera is turned on, and you can also use the built-in Sensor Cleaning function to lift the mirror and clean the image sensor with a blower brush or third-party cleaning solution. The Pentax Z's High Dynamic Range HDR Capture option takes three images with different exposures, with 3 different strengths on offer, and then records a single image that combines the properly exposed parts of each one, expanding its dynamic range.
Although this option is always at your disposal, remember that it is meant to be used in strong, contrasty lighting at base ISO. It will be interesting to see how the camera fares near the limits of its sensitivity range, i.
The Z inherits the Pentax K-3 's impressive white balance system, which is especially effective in low light. Notice how the two nighttime photos above don't suffer from the yellow color cast which often plagued low-light photos from cameras before the K With the D-FA 55mm F2.
Based on what we've seen today, we can already safely conclude that the Z is any landscape photographer's dream. But if you're interested in the hard evidence, stay tuned for our first impressions post followed by an in-depth review of the Pentax Z!
Pentax Z First Impressions. Samyang 10mm F2. Various writers regularly contribute articles to the Pentax Forums homepage blog. More recent articles are published under each author's forum username.
We hope you enjoy our guides and news We are the ultimate Pentax resource and home of the largest and friendliest forum for Pentax users! Login Register. Best cameras and lenses. Now reading: Lightroom plug-in for Pentax Z tethered shooting now available 16 comments. Adobe Lightroom Creative Cloud users can use Lightroom Mobile to connect to tethered sessions via cloud services to comment and adjust photographs and return those edits to the photographer from anywhere in the world.
Adobe Lightroom offers an exceptional cataloging system that allows photographers to capture and catalog tethered sessions with confidence. The PENTAX Tethered Capture Plug-in for Adobe Lightroom is an easy-to-install, powerful and streamlined tethering solution that allows any photographer to manage their own workflow from capture to output. Adobe Lightroom users can download and apply presets to any tethered capture session thus eliminating the need to process every raw file individually.
Tags: lightroom , medium-format , pentax , ricoh , software-news. Pentax Z. We are retrieving offers for your location, please refresh the page to see the prices. View Comments Comments All Hey, maybe that should be the new company slogan! FantasticMrFox This update aside and the fact that for whatever reason it's not available for the K3 series or K-S2 , it's disappointing how all Pentax ever does with firmware updates is add lens compatibility and include generally imperceptible 'general performance increases'.
RolliPoli Will it work with a D??? Sandyramirez Unfortunately no. Sandyramirez I will have an article up shortly on my website going through tethering options and how this plugin works including the integration with Lightroom Moble based on the 0. Michael H A great addition to for the Z, but the links are not working to the Ricoh site.
LF Photography There isn't one. You may also like. Lightroom CC 2. TourBox is a portable controller that speeds up Photoshop and Lightroom photo editing. Ricoh announces new service and support plan for Pentax Z. More about gear in this article. Latest sample galleries. OM System 20mm F1. Tamron mm F See more galleries ». Latest in-depth reviews. Read more reviews ». Latest buying guides. Best drones in Best video cameras for photographers in Best cameras for Instagram in Best cameras for vlogging in Check out more buying guides ».
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