Vandyu
Veteran Member
Anyone think that Nikon might be planning to bring the D90 out as a FF model in preparation for a new model from Sony? Or, more likely there would be an entirely new line, similar to the 5D.
As you've probably read, Sony joins Nikon and Canon in larger sensor development, and I would expect them to waste little time in getting a model to market. That could place Sony and Canon in the $2000 range and Nikon still in the stratosphere with the D3.
If you missed the news release, here's the first paragraph from the DPR website:
Pre-PMA 2008: In a surprise move Sony today announced its entry into the rapidly-expanding 24x36mm imaging sensor market with its own 24.81 megapixel CMOS offering. Joining Canon and Nikon in the full-frame market, this new chip promises to output all pixels at 6.3 fps with lower noise than other designs of similar pixel-pitch thanks to its “Column-Parallel A/D Conversion Technique” whereby each column of photosites is given its own Analogue to Digital Converter. The ADCs themselves are 12-bit, flying in the face of current trends which are toward 14-bit devices but the combination of speed, dynamic range and sheer resolving power displayed by this sensor make it one to watch for when Sony puts into full production hopefully before the year is out.
As you've probably read, Sony joins Nikon and Canon in larger sensor development, and I would expect them to waste little time in getting a model to market. That could place Sony and Canon in the $2000 range and Nikon still in the stratosphere with the D3.
If you missed the news release, here's the first paragraph from the DPR website:
Pre-PMA 2008: In a surprise move Sony today announced its entry into the rapidly-expanding 24x36mm imaging sensor market with its own 24.81 megapixel CMOS offering. Joining Canon and Nikon in the full-frame market, this new chip promises to output all pixels at 6.3 fps with lower noise than other designs of similar pixel-pitch thanks to its “Column-Parallel A/D Conversion Technique” whereby each column of photosites is given its own Analogue to Digital Converter. The ADCs themselves are 12-bit, flying in the face of current trends which are toward 14-bit devices but the combination of speed, dynamic range and sheer resolving power displayed by this sensor make it one to watch for when Sony puts into full production hopefully before the year is out.