DougOB
Senior Member
The flatter advantage is overhyped, it helps with marketing. Put on pretty much any lens and the advantage is gone. On the other hand Pentax were looking at XS lenses that could make use of the space.Doug, one important advantage of mirror-less cameras is, that they are flatter. At least, this would be my main reason to get such a camera. And with the existing K mount there is no way to make any flat camera :-( .The K-01 did not fail because of the K-mount. It was a style design disaster that meant nobody took it seriously. There were a few performance limitations that could have been worked out with a mkII version. The biggest weaknnes (for me) is no EVF, back screen only. It is difficult to use on a sunny day. Although a new mount is technically preferable for a MILC it is still perfectly possible with a k-mount.No, no, there is one cardinal "obstacle" to go mirror-less! And it is the K mount. Pentax will (they have to) stick with this mount forever! This is their the only way to survive! This is what makes them so unique! And this is what prevents them to go mirrorless. Unless they would want to repeat another K-01 fiasco :-( .It takes very little extra R&D for Pentax to pull this - they have a production line, 90% of parts are same, an EVF can simply be bought from a vendor and the software already has a lot of features from other mirrorless cameras. If Ricoh GR can be successful, maybe a Pentax MILC Lx can be as well. But I guess it is not Pentax engineers but Ricoh management that ties their hands.I don't really understand nostalgia for old technology. I mean, I understand it if it's an object one bought a long time ago and kept preciously, why not, but I don't get why one would want something new with a look (and often bad or limited ergonomics and features) from the past.The answers have been helpful to understand what current issues exist and why Pentax may not consider it as the best idea. I can also understand why people who appreciate extensive customizable buttons and good ergonomics may not want to straddle along a Pentax KP successor, just for looks.
I think K3 Mark III form factor is great. A KP form factor would impact the whole DSLR experience. Either Pentax should make a truly retro and thin but highly capable mirror less lineup, or they should continue making their excellent DSLRs. A juxtaposition of both might be more Frankenstein than cute.
I mean, if it's a passion for very simple cameras with stripped down controls, one can just buy a GoPro ? :-D
Pentax might have to look for another owner if they have to reinvent themselves(again!).
Doug

Doug
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