Impulses
Forum Pro
Sometimes, 1/60 is still not as fast as the stacked sensor bodies (OM-1, A9/1, Z9, R3, X-H2S, etc.) which read it at 1/120-1/250, AFAIK the latter is closer to the actual travel speed of a mechanical shutter (which can also show rolling shutter under extreme enough circumstances, it's just far less likely)... So the E-M5 III and the last two E-M1 are halfway there.Thanks, so the E-M5 III has a fast enough readout speed to use electronic shutter even for BIF and fast action?Not quite sure but I think it's in their respective manuals.Thanks, I had always wondered about that! Do the max bulb times of Panny cameras like the GX9 and G95 now match Oly's? In my camera I think it is 20 minutes?It is a Sony, the only 16MP Pana sensor that Oly ever used was a custom one-off in the original E-M1 and that one had some of the same long exposure limitations.Is the 16 MP sensor in the EM10 II from Sony or Panny? I thought it was from Sony?In addition to the improvements mentioned by Hatstand, the G95 did incur more of a crop on 4K video than the G85 IIRC, so that might be a potential downside, the Sony 20MP sensor also handles long exposures much better than the previous gen 16MP Pana sensor tho so that's another improvement.Yeah if I use small primes it will keep the G80 down in size, although it might look silly with small lenses attached. Do you find the G90 a big improvement over the G80? I know it's bigger again in size and weight.I have both G80 (G85) and FZ1000*...Is the G85 as good a viewfinder as the FZ1000? I know it's still a big heavy camera.
The G80 body alone is not so big and heavy compared to the FZ1000?
It's your choice of lens that will determine whether it's bigger/heavier or smaller/lighter overall...
As for the viewfinders, I personally find them very similar. Which I guess is not surprising given their technical specs are pretty much the same? (G80 maybe slightly higher magnification? I dunno, different sites seems to list different values for each)
BTW, G85 is 16MP sensor. If the resolution is important to you, that would be a step back vs the FZ1000's 20MP. Note that the G90 (G95) has 20MP sensor.
*I'm using a G90 instead of the G80 now though, and only using the FZ1000 for its high-speed video these days. (G90 has high speed video but no autofocus for it whatsoever - manual focus only, or use the mode dial to switch to a mode that autofocuses, then switch to movie mode to start recording. That's almost useless for my purposes, where the FZ1000 at least autofocuses until you start recording, then fixed-focus)
All of Sony sensors (the various 16MP iterations and the two 20MP in use with very different readout rates) have the same advantage when it comes to long exposures AFAIK (versus the last 16MP Pana made). There's a good example of this in Cameralabs' E-M5 II (not III) review IIRC.Is the 20 MP sensor from Sony better than that one too for long exposures? In what ways? Thanks!
Basically the Pana sensors just show a lot more hot (bright) pixels during a long exposure, to the point where you can shoot the Sony sensor without dark frame NR and still match the results of the Pana with it. That's probably why Pana made a big increase to the max bulb times of their bodies in the GX9 & G95.
There might be other differences in e-shutter implemention even when they use the same sensors, since the one sensor can be configured to work a number of ways (IIRC the G9 had some differences vs say the E-M1 II depending on the ISO level)... For using a lot of e-shutter I'd want something with a faster readout regardless of bit depth etc., so the 1/60 sensors in the G9 (GH5?) / E-M5 III / E-M1 II & III, or the much faster one in the OM-1 (~1/125?).I noticed you also mentioned readout rates and I also wondered why the differences in electronic shutter between Olympus and Panny. Which sensor would you say is the best for using electronic shutter the most?
With anything slower you're risking more rolling shutter distortion and/or light banding when using e-shutter for general shooting, which accounts for most other bodies out there without a stacked sensor (a couple Canon RF bodies w/o one can also manage ~1/60).
From what I've seen you probably wouldn't get rolling shutter distortion on a lot of gliding or larger birds, or humans moving on their own power; but you might get it on a ball if it's been thrown/passed fast enough, or a car racing thru the frame, or a hummingbird that's flapping it's wings quite quickly (seen it particularly there where the wing can end up looking twisted).