Re: Canon M6 II with kits lens or Body only + buy a lens?
nnowak wrote:
thunder storm wrote:
nnowak wrote:
R2D2 wrote:
borris14 wrote:
I'm looking to upgrade from a Canon G7X II which was my first camera that got me into photography.
I want something to step up to and the M6 II seems to tick a lot of the boxes - I know it is three years old but still looks a good camera and something newer like the R7 is a little too big of a leap for me price wise.
My main question is whether people think the M6II kit with the 15-45 lens and EVF for around £1050 is a good deal and an acceptable lens for that package? Or whether the 15-45mm lens should be skipped, and I should go for body only and buy a lens separately? That would mean not having the EVF too though. My main uses are family and travel photography.
What do people think?
I'll go against the grain a bit. (If you get a good copy of the 15-45) it'll give you a 24-70mm equiv lens, which with the M6ii's higher MP and much better image quality (over the G7X ii), with some cropping you'll easily get out to the G7X ii's 100mm equiv zoom. So no loss there. The 15-45 is so nice and light too.
Cropping to get a 100mm equivalent view drops the M6 II all of the way down to 16.7 megapixels on a sensor area smaller than micro 4/3.
The G7X II has a much brighter f/1.8-2.8 lens than the EF-M 15-45mm f/3.5-6.3. In full frame equivalence, the G7X II is a 24-100mm f/5.0-8.0. The EF-M 15-45mm has a full frame equivalence of 24-70mm f/5.6-10. Cropping to a 100mm equivalent puts you at f/14 equivalent.
Yes, the M6 II sensor is much better than the G7X II sensor, but the slow apertures of the 15-45mm neuters much of that advantage.
DR of the M6ii will still crush the G7Xii...
Actually, no, it won't. Equivalence impacts dynamic range too. At base ISO, the M6 II has one extra stop of dynamic range compared to the G7X II. However, the G7X II lens is at least two stop brighter at all focal lengths than the EF-M 15-45mm. If you are limited in you shutter speeds, and need to be at ISO 6400 with the M6 II, the G7X II will only be at ISO 1600 and will have half a stop more dynamic range.
M6 II vs. G7X II
If you are primarily capturing landscapes at base ISO, the M6 II clearly wins for dynamic range and resolution. If you are capturing general family snapshots in variable light
This includes harsh day light. Dynamic range isn't usefull only in low light situations, it's rather the opposite. In my experience good dynamic range helps a lot for family snap shots.
(the OP's use case), the 15-45mm kit lens kills many of the advantages of the M6 II.
Cropping only exasperates the situation.
The 15-45mm shouldn't be your the only lens ror an M6ii.
Unless you're offering to buy the OP an extra lens, their plan is to just start with a kit lens.
That's a bad plan. In that case the OP shouldn't get the M6ii at all.
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45 is more than enough, but 500.000 isn't