Pentax K-1 – Enters the battle The Pentax K-1 is finally in the full frame DSLR game. Ricoh announced the new Pentax K-1, a camera that offers innovative features not available in any other DSLR. Inside the camera is a 36.4-megapixel CMOS sensor that omits the anti-aliasing filter to offer maximum sharpness — an AA Filter Simulator feature helps eliminate the moiré effect from photos instead. Sensitivity goes up to ISO 204800, and the new PRIME IV imaging engine allows for the capture of 14-bit RAW photos. A newly refined SR II Shake Reduction system has 5-axis stabilization and provides an equivalent compensation of 5 exposure stops. A Pixel Shift Resolution System in the camera can capture super-resolution photos by capturing “four images of the same scene by shifting the image sensor by a single pixel for each image, then synthesizes them into a single composite image”. The other sensor-shift modes are also clever: the K-1 includes Horizon Correction, which rotates the sensor if you hold the camera slightly off-level, and the Astrotracer system that uses the sensor's movement to cancel-out the effect of the Earth's rotation when taking images of stars (something it can calculate using its GPS) For autofocusing, the K-1 boasts a new SAFOX 12 AF system that has 33 autofocus points (25 of which are cross-type). The camera body itself is both compact and rugged. It’s weather-sealed, dustproof, and cold-proof thanks to 87 sealing points, allowing you to take the camera into harsh environments and have it emerge unscathed. On the back of the body is a Flexible-tilt 3.2-inch 1.04-million-dot LCD screen — the first of its kind on any DSLR. You can position the screen to your desired angle both horizontally and vertically. Another unique DSLR feature is the special Operation Assist Lights on the body, which are small white LEDs that help you work the camera’s controls while shooting in low-light environments. The lights help you do things such as change lenses, swap memory cards, and use the interface on the back of the camera, all without having to use external illumination or the bright LCD menu. For photographers moving up to the K-1 from a crop sensor system, there’s a Crop Mode that lets you shoot APS-C-sized photos regardless of what lens you’re using. In other words, you’ll be able to keep your existing lens collection, as the camera will detect the lens type and configure its settings accordingly. Other features and specs of the K-1 include a “nearly 100%” viewfinder, Wi-Fi, GPS, a Dust Removal feature, HDR mode, dual SD card slots, 1080p video at 30fps, and 4.4fps continuous shooting (23 RAW photos or 70 JPEG). Launching alongside the Pentax K-1 are 12 full-frame lenses, including the lenses with most used focal distances like 15-30mm f/2.8, 24-70mm f/2.8, 70-200mm f/2.8 and 150-400mm f/4.5-5.6. For now, though, those looking for modern, fast-focusing primes will be disappointed. Other reason for all the interest in a full-frame Pentax is the vast collection of K-mount lenses that exist around the world. The K-1 lets you use the aperture rings on these lenses and can give a focus confirmation beep with the central AF point, even with manual focus lenses. When you mount an older, manual lens the K-1 prompts you to manually specify the focal length so that the image stabilization can be tuned appropriately. Combine the power of the K-1 with the portability and support of the Scorpion EX Pro Kit and a LED Light + Monitor to create the ultimate travel rig! The Pentax K-1 will be available starting in April 2016 for $1,800.