The Pentax K1 in pixel-shift mode is a game-changer for me, one not totally welcome because of the difficulties in using non-coupled lenses, i.e. all my Nikon F-mount lenses with a simple adapter. This whole system, IMO, is just shy of not-worth-it and reminds me a lot of the film days, when we didn’t know what we got when we pressed the shutter until days later.
In this case, I have no way to get the K1 to show me the amount of light reaching the shutter, but it insists on staying all the way open. Things like that. It makes no sense, but I find myself blaming Nikon for being so behind the curve as to offer nothing remotely similar, not even increased resolution. I need 50 Mpx or higher.
For me, this is compounded because I want to stack focus, at least a little, and that only makes things that much more difficult. There is the annoying camera interface (IMO), the changing light in the time it takes to run four shots through the process, and the havoc that any movement plays with the image with pixel-shift turned on, the huge files for me computer to handle, etc. I am just complaining and, as mentioned, part of me wishes I could just walk away and declare it not worth it. But it probably is worth it.
With coupled-lenses, like Pentax’s own (IMO lame) selection of lenses or the few I have been able to find in Pentax K mount, the process is tolerable, but I am back shooting with non-APO lenses, and CA still exists big time and I am not used to seeing it much any more, etc.
As mentioned, trying to bring other lenses into the picture with an adapter, I feel like Ansel Adams (only I am not him) with a large view camera and all of the guesswork he must have mastered. I am used to being able to look at LiveView and see my aperture AND shutter adjusted in real-time. With the Pentax K1 and alien lenses, I have to shoot frames until I get the light where I want it, by guess-work. And I don’t like the DejaVue it throws me into. I was done with film and its quirks, or at least so I thought.
The Nikon>Pentax adapters are all so cheaply made that the glass in them (to allow infinity) ruins any lens I might attach, so the first thing I did was break out the glass in the adapter. I don’t need infinity, and am better off without their lousy glass.
Also, color in the Pentax K1 is more sensitive on the bright side than my Nikon D810. It is far easier to blow out the whites and Lloyd Chambers (in an email) explained that at ISO 64, the Nikon D810 “leaves the top 1.5 to 2-stops unexposed due to weird metering and histogram – a bug. ... I remember reading an interview that said that ISO 64 was some kind of special hardware mode for idealized dynamic range. But see no RawDigger evidence that the Pentax K1 is less good in SuperRes mode (regular mode unclear, but it is a newer sensor).” Be that as it may, I have to be more careful at the “whites” end of the spectrum.
I must be getting old
This shot taken with the Pentax K1, and adapter, for a Nikon F-mount version of the Voigtlander 125mm f/2.5 APO-Lanthar lens at f/16, ISO 100, 1/8 sec. F/16 is high to expect no signs of diffraction, and there was a little wind, and this is stacked (two images.)