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dpreviewTV: EF-M 22mm F2 not "ideal" for the M6 Mk II?

Started Sep 20, 2019 | Discussions
RLight Senior Member • Posts: 4,417
Re: Regarding Sony...

thunder storm wrote:

RLight wrote:

thunder storm wrote:

Ideally i would save up for the successor of the A7III + lenses without spilling money on incremental upgrades. However, i need that A6400 AF right now. My daughters won't pause their lives because daddy is saving up for a new camera. You can't do this 3 years over again.

M50 is better than M100 for AF, but still it chooses the wrong eye or the borders of the subject in stead of the eye or front of the subject too often. Actually, the M50 sets the bar higher for my AF-wishes. It was good. Great improvement. But now i want better.

please keep us apprised

I will wait for the good and detailed reviews of the A6600. And i need to take a look at how these C-modes actually work to evaluate how important it is to have 3 in stead of 1.

The A6600 is an interesting beast; improved AF "smartness", JPEG engine tweaks, and now some interesting APS-C glass to top it off. If, you don't need true low-light, it's promising. It should be a real contender coming out of Sony, not just one DPR is touting. It may truly perform.

But the price? And furthermore the images that I've seen thus far although pretty good (much improved ala A6400),

Could you please give a more detailed vision why it is much improved over the A6400?

I mean the A6600 received the benefits of the A6400 (smarter AF, better SOOC colors in JPEG), not that the A6600 is "better" than the A6400.

still don't match Canon's desirability. I feel this is more a Fuji-Sony, that is improved Sony but with a Fuji price-tag.

The price is steep, granted.

It's obvious to me Sony should have another beast soon (well in the future, maybe not soon), probably without IBIS, but probably with that 26MP Sony sensor, say a A6450, that might be of interest as in theory it'll be cheaper, but better in 4k rolling shutter.

I would choose IBIS over 2 extra Mp. I am a stills shooter, so rolling shutter doesn't matter to me. I understand it can be a big deal for video.

I'm not a big fan of the IBIS in the A6500/A6600. From the video demo's I've seen, it's maybe a stop, if that. DPR has it pegged at 2.5 stops. That's generous, but possible I gather.

If, the EOS M6 Mark II hadn't come around, I'd be considering both myself as a lightweight companion. But, it did. Just in time it would seem too. Improved subject tracking (if it has the EOS R firmware, I gather it has the existing, but perhaps not the one coming out), low light AF,

Low light AF, yes, that is a big thing, but when i need low light AF the most i need a speed light too, AND i am a viewfinder shooter... so....

....

It's just too bad. Such an idiot crippling just to prevent the ancient dslr which should have been released 3 years ago. Same is true for that headphone jack. The 90D has it, while the M6mkII should have it. Doesn't bother me as a stills shooter, but again, crazy choices from Canon here.

plus 4K worth something.

I'm all for investigating other platforms, I've been looking hard at that new Sony, but I've found it wanting. I've found APS-C can't match FF for some things over the years so I have to look at it as merely a APS-C option. Sony needed an A7000, not this guy now that the M6 Mark II is out. They needed (even) better UI,

I think i can find my way with it. There are kind of "my menus" or something like that, so yes, you will have to dive in first, which can be time consuming but still a fun thing to do as usual when playing around with new toys, but after that stage you can just rule out everything you don't need and make immediately available what you DO need, and as long as that last thing is possible, i can live with complex menu's.

(even) better colors,

Black box for me. Don't know anything else but Canon colors.

better sensor metrics over the A6400/A6500. They delivered none of those. Instead in a very Canon-like fashion they repackaged the upgrades of the A6400 into the A6500 and called it the A6600 and charged alot more.

Yeah, i agree. They really should have launched the A6600 first, and the A6400 later. OTOH: the A6600 is the best focusing aps-c camera with sensor stabilization, and Sony knows it.... You could also blame the competition for the price of the A6600 being too high....

These are welcome upgrades, but, perhaps the A6400 is the "smarter" choice as the IBIS of the A6500/A6600 in my viewing is not that impressive.

For video: yes. For stills: i am happy with 2 stops. Really. In most cases 2 stops is enough. 2 stops with my 18-35, my 50-100mm, a 30mm f/1.4 prime, a 56 f/1.4 prime..... you know.... it is tempting, regardless the higher price. And i also think 3 C modes is better than one. And 1 bigger battery in stead of 2 smaller ones....

I gather the IBIS of the A7III is more impressive.

A7III has not the same AF. You will have to wait till the A7IV for that.

The A6450 may bake in some of the complaints I have above, with, that 26MP sensor I gather...

I do think you're right though, the A7RIV's colors are on the other hand quite good. Good enough now for my liking. I have the R though already. And the RF glass is better...

I have some budget problems with ordinary f/2.8 zooms already.

But, I suspect you won't do poorly with the A7 IV when it comes out; it was a matter of time before Sony caught (well got close enough / acceptable) Canon in SOOC rendition. Glass though? That's another story. If you're fine with Sigma's offerings, you should be happy though. But, by the time the A7 IV comes out, the 5D-like R should be out. Just like the EOS M6 Mark II, it sounds like it'll come "just in time".

I don't believe in higher Mp's being more important than smarter AF. To my eye the biggest bottle neck is AF making the Mp's shine. Not the other way around.

I like a high hitrate. I like to have the best moment in focus. I don't like to have a less than best moment in focus with a higher Mp-count while having the best moment slightly out of focus (which is even more annoying with more Mp.)

It depends on what you shoot of course. I you're shooting stuff without one moment being much better than the other Mp could be more important than hitrate (AF).

I predicated this last year that this day will come where the two meet (Canon and Sony) in most regards with glass and sensor tech (DPAF vs Pixel stripes) being the differentiators. I know Nnowak will challenge this, but, it would appear DPAF has a low-light advantage and AF speed advantage all things equal. Likewise, pixel stripped sensors will ultimately have a sensor metric advantage. Depends what you want. Likewise, Canon will always make better glass. Sigma is the wild card here though on both sides...

I'll just buy the A6?00 now, and the M5mkII next to it (when canon finally understands the dslr era is over and crippling M-bodies to protect ancient tech is stupid), and until than my M50 + sigma 18-35mm will be my low light workhorse. Of course full frame is a bit better, however, at some point you'll realize you can't make your DOF thinner endlessly in all cases, and as such, all you need is to bring in some light, or, in other words, a hotshoe NOT being occupied by a eevf. Canon, for G*ds sake, gimme my M5mkII.... I need it next to my A6?00!!!

To DPR's point, not sure there will be a M5 Mark II.

Canon doesn't make always better glass. The EF 35mm f/1.4 mkII is challenged by a new Tamron. Sigma brings out a 35mm f/1.2. The Canon EF 85mm f/1.4 wasn't class leading compared to other 85mm options. The RF 85mm is great. But there's no body with awesome eye AF to slap it on, which still give you a higher than necessary risk the best moment in highest contrast and resolution will be slightly out of focus. So sad.

I think the 32 is better than that, personally.

Heaven is a place where you can mount an RF 85mm f/1.2 on a Sony A7RmkIV.... We are just mortal beings on this earth below who have to live with impossibilities.

Still..... i think i gonna choose the A6600 over the A6400. Not decided yet.

Give it a round, I think this was a half-hearted attempt by Sony. With how fast they put out stuff? A7000 in like 6 months.

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Ed Rizk Veteran Member • Posts: 3,898
Re: You're kidding, right?

nnowak wrote:

RLight wrote:

nnowak wrote:

RLight wrote:

The latest RF 50mm, 85mm f/1.2L's have no peer (f/1.2 lens with that high of performance). Or for that matter, how many other mfgs have f/1.2 primes? Not many. They often stop at f/1.4.

You seem to be forgetting that Nikon even exists. Their Z roadmap lists 35mm f/1.2, 50mm f/1.2 and 85mm f/1.2

I'll be (very) happy if Nikon does this, or even survives to be blunt. Competition is good, but, IMO, Nikon's future is very uncertain.

Nikon's future is no less uncertain than Canon's. Nikon put the brakes on the overabundance of bottom feeder DSLR models years before Canon. Nikon appears to be heading towards a single mirrorless mount for all sensor formats. I am not suggesting Canon is going to fail, but Nikon has been making some smarter long term moves than Canon. I think Nikon's financials have already hit bottom, but I think Canon still has some more pain ahead.

Neither one of those companies has a particularly "uncertain" future.  Cameras are not going away.   Back in the days of film, camera sales were lower than they are now and still supported several camera companies.

There will be a smaller selection of cameras by each company and upgrades will come less often.

Nobody, has a 11-24 f/4L.

Sony has the FE 12-24mm f/4.0 G and Fuji has an equivalent XF 8-16mm f/2.8. If you are bragging about the lens being 1mm wider than the competition, you had better take a look at the image quality at 11mm first.

They do. It's not 11mm. EF mount is going to be less than stellar on the wide end in the corners due to the flange benefit the FE has... I'm willing to bet dollars to donuts if DXO does a benchmark on both the 11-24 and the Sony 12-24, the Canon will be center-sharper, and the Sony 12-24 will be corner sharper.

Sounds like you agree the Sony is the better extreme wide angle zoom.

I'm also willing to bet dollars to donuts the RF 15-35 f/2.8L won't have a peer when tested which will have the flange benefit of RF mount.

Until Nikon launches their 14-24mm f/2.8

Canon's great whites?

Have you seen the Nikon PF Telephotos? In case you weren't aware, PF is Nikon's version of Canon's DO. And how many years did it take before Canon finally built some wide angle lenses that weren't garbage? For a very long time, Nikon ruled the wide angles and Canon ruled the telephotos, but that was years ago. There will be plenty of professionals on the sidelines of the upcoming summer Olympics shooting with Nikon and Sony telephoto lenses.

I'm well aware. Now Canon rules both.

No, they don't. If Canon is as fantastic as you claim, why are such a significant number of photographers shooting with Nikon?

Canon still has the largest share.

Beg to differ, ahem.

I am not trying to disparage Canon glass, but you seem to be completely unaware of the fantastic lenses being produced by other manufacturers.

Sigma makes some fine glass, if you ask me. As does Sony and Nikon. But, you've failed to demonstrate how, today, they have more breadth, and depth in offerings. Not yesterday, not tomorrow, today.

Sony has far more mirrorless lenses than Nikon and Canon combined and many are truly excellent. Where is the Canon equivalent to the Nikon 200-500mm f/5.6 or the Nikon 120-300mm f/2.8?

Looking at your previous post in this thread about lens selection, I agree with you to an extent.  I like the Z offerings better than the R offerings.   If you have to have a "mirrorless" lens, Sony is the best option, and Fuji is the only other option with a complete selection.

Canon, however beats them all with the ability to use EF lenses to their fullest capability.

I'll buy one or two RF lenses for convenience in walking around.   (I have two, but will probably sell the RF 24-105.   It's not better or longer enough than the EF 24-70 F4 to give up the macro focus.).

If I get the M6 II, I'll buy two to four M lenses for travel, depending on whether or not I add a superzoom instead of M telephoto and normal zoom.

However, my premium lenses will remain all EF, because I can use them on either the M or the R for different AOVs, and I can use them on a DSLR, which I still prefer on a nice day.   No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection.

You have to gather although Nikon and Sony will continue to "catch up", Canon won't be standing still. In the same way as Canon "catches up" with sensors, neither will Sony stand still in that same period.

For mirrorless, both Canon and Nikon are playing catch up.

I'm not sure, at least for a still shooter, like me.  (Video is too much like work.)

The superior lens selection is a big deal for me, considering the EF catalogue.

The dual pixel focus is vastly superior, both from what I have read and personal experience.   A good friend of mine is a big Sony fanatic.   He shoots mostly video, so he should probably stay that way.   We had a side by side test, and the R smokes the Sony on focus speed and accuracy, especially in low light.

No IQ advantage means anything if your shots are out of focus.

I have also found that DPP handles noise on Canon files better than other programs, so the DR difference is less if you first de noise in DPP then retouch elsewhere.

I'm hoping the M6 II is a small R.   If it is, I want it.  I got rid of my 60D when I got the R.  I miss having a crop camera to use with my EF lenses.

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Ed Rizk

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MAC Forum Pro • Posts: 18,487
Re: Regarding Sony...

thunder storm wrote:

RLight wrote:

thunder storm wrote:

Ideally i would save up for the successor of the A7III + lenses without spilling money on incremental upgrades. However, i need that A6400 AF right now. My daughters won't pause their lives because daddy is saving up for a new camera. You can't do this 3 years over again.

M50 is better than M100 for AF, but still it chooses the wrong eye or the borders of the subject in stead of the eye or front of the subject too often. Actually, the M50 sets the bar higher for my AF-wishes. It was good. Great improvement. But now i want better.

please keep us apprised

I will wait for the good and detailed reviews of the A6600. And i need to take a look at how these C-modes actually work to evaluate how important it is to have 3 in stead of 1.

The A6600 is an interesting beast; improved AF "smartness", JPEG engine tweaks, and now some interesting APS-C glass to top it off. If, you don't need true low-light, it's promising. It should be a real contender coming out of Sony, not just one DPR is touting. It may truly perform.

But the price? And furthermore the images that I've seen thus far although pretty good (much improved ala A6400),

Could you please give a more detailed vision why it is much improved over the A6400?

still don't match Canon's desirability. I feel this is more a Fuji-Sony, that is improved Sony but with a Fuji price-tag.

The price is steep, granted.

It's obvious to me Sony should have another beast soon (well in the future, maybe not soon), probably without IBIS, but probably with that 26MP Sony sensor, say a A6450, that might be of interest as in theory it'll be cheaper, but better in 4k rolling shutter.

I would choose IBIS over 2 extra Mp. I am a stills shooter, so rolling shutter doesn't matter to me. I understand it can be a big deal for video.

If, the EOS M6 Mark II hadn't come around, I'd be considering both myself as a lightweight companion. But, it did. Just in time it would seem too. Improved subject tracking (if it has the EOS R firmware, I gather it has the existing, but perhaps not the one coming out), low light AF,

Low light AF, yes, that is a big thing, but when i need low light AF the most i need a speed light too, AND i am a viewfinder shooter... so....

....

It's just too bad. Such an idiot crippling just to prevent the ancient dslr which should have been released 3 years ago. Same is true for that headphone jack. The 90D has it, while the M6mkII should have it. Doesn't bother me as a stills shooter, but again, crazy choices from Canon here.

plus 4K worth something.

I'm all for investigating other platforms, I've been looking hard at that new Sony, but I've found it wanting. I've found APS-C can't match FF for some things over the years so I have to look at it as merely a APS-C option. Sony needed an A7000, not this guy now that the M6 Mark II is out. They needed (even) better UI,

I think i can find my way with it. There are kind of "my menus" or something like that, so yes, you will have to dive in first, which can be time consuming but still a fun thing to do as usual when playing around with new toys, but after that stage you can just rule out everything you don't need and make immediately available what you DO need, and as long as that last thing is possible, i can live with complex menu's.

(even) better colors,

Black box for me. Don't know anything else but Canon colors.

better sensor metrics over the A6400/A6500. They delivered none of those. Instead in a very Canon-like fashion they repackaged the upgrades of the A6400 into the A6500 and called it the A6600 and charged alot more.

Yeah, i agree. They really should have launched the A6600 first, and the A6400 later. OTOH: the A6600 is the best focusing aps-c camera with sensor stabilization, and Sony knows it.... You could also blame the competition for the price of the A6600 being too high....

These are welcome upgrades, but, perhaps the A6400 is the "smarter" choice as the IBIS of the A6500/A6600 in my viewing is not that impressive.

For video: yes. For stills: i am happy with 2 stops. Really. In most cases 2 stops is enough. 2 stops with my 18-35, my 50-100mm, a 30mm f/1.4 prime, a 56 f/1.4 prime..... you know.... it is tempting, regardless the higher price. And i also think 3 C modes is better than one. And 1 bigger battery in stead of 2 smaller ones....

I gather the IBIS of the A7III is more impressive.

A7III has not the same AF. You will have to wait till the A7IV for that.

The A6450 may bake in some of the complaints I have above, with, that 26MP sensor I gather...

I do think you're right though, the A7RIV's colors are on the other hand quite good. Good enough now for my liking. I have the R though already. And the RF glass is better...

I have some budget problems with ordinary f/2.8 zooms already.

But, I suspect you won't do poorly with the A7 IV when it comes out; it was a matter of time before Sony caught (well got close enough / acceptable) Canon in SOOC rendition. Glass though? That's another story. If you're fine with Sigma's offerings, you should be happy though. But, by the time the A7 IV comes out, the 5D-like R should be out. Just like the EOS M6 Mark II, it sounds like it'll come "just in time".

I don't believe in higher Mp's being more important than smarter AF. To my eye the biggest bottle neck is AF making the Mp's shine. Not the other way around.

I like a high hitrate. I like to have the best moment in focus. I don't like to have a less than best moment in focus with a higher Mp-count while having the best moment slightly out of focus (which is even more annoying with more Mp.)

It depends on what you shoot of course. I you're shooting stuff without one moment being much better than the other Mp could be more important than hitrate (AF).

I predicated this last year that this day will come where the two meet (Canon and Sony) in most regards with glass and sensor tech (DPAF vs Pixel stripes) being the differentiators. I know Nnowak will challenge this, but, it would appear DPAF has a low-light advantage and AF speed advantage all things equal. Likewise, pixel stripped sensors will ultimately have a sensor metric advantage. Depends what you want. Likewise, Canon will always make better glass. Sigma is the wild card here though on both sides...

I'll just buy the A6?00 now, and the M5mkII next to it (when canon finally understands the dslr era is over and crippling M-bodies to protect ancient tech is stupid), and until than my M50 + sigma 18-35mm will be my low light workhorse. Of course full frame is a bit better, however, at some point you'll realize you can't make your DOF thinner endlessly in all cases, and as such, all you need is to bring in some light, or, in other words, a hotshoe NOT being occupied by a eevf. Canon, for G*ds sake, gimme my M5mkII.... I need it next to my A6?00!!!

Canon doesn't make always better glass. The EF 35mm f/1.4 mkII is challenged by a new Tamron. Sigma brings out a 35mm f/1.2. The Canon EF 85mm f/1.4 wasn't class leading compared to other 85mm options. The RF 85mm is great. But there's no body with awesome eye AF to slap it on, which still give you a higher than necessary risk the best moment in highest contrast and resolution will be slightly out of focus. So sad.

Heaven is a place where you can mount an RF 85mm f/1.2 on a Sony A7RmkIV.... We are just mortal beings on this earth below who have to live with impossibilities.

Still..... i think i gonna choose the A6600 over the A6400. Not decided yet.

large investments in crop if you ever go FF

I think the Fro has some good points

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k_vdsaKGa7k&t=64s

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nnowak Veteran Member • Posts: 9,074
Re: You're kidding, right?
1

Ed Rizk wrote:

nnowak wrote:

RLight wrote:

nnowak wrote:

RLight wrote:

The latest RF 50mm, 85mm f/1.2L's have no peer (f/1.2 lens with that high of performance). Or for that matter, how many other mfgs have f/1.2 primes? Not many. They often stop at f/1.4.

You seem to be forgetting that Nikon even exists. Their Z roadmap lists 35mm f/1.2, 50mm f/1.2 and 85mm f/1.2

I'll be (very) happy if Nikon does this, or even survives to be blunt. Competition is good, but, IMO, Nikon's future is very uncertain.

Nikon's future is no less uncertain than Canon's. Nikon put the brakes on the overabundance of bottom feeder DSLR models years before Canon. Nikon appears to be heading towards a single mirrorless mount for all sensor formats. I am not suggesting Canon is going to fail, but Nikon has been making some smarter long term moves than Canon. I think Nikon's financials have already hit bottom, but I think Canon still has some more pain ahead.

Neither one of those companies has a particularly "uncertain" future. Cameras are not going away. Back in the days of film, camera sales were lower than they are now and still supported several camera companies.

Back in the film days, if you wanted a photo, there was no other option.  You needed a camera and film.  Now you no longer need a stand alone camera

There will be a smaller selection of cameras by each company and upgrades will come less often.

This is definitely true, but it is too early to predict who or what will be left standing.  Here's a hypothetical... Olympus sells off their camera division to Google who then merges all of the smartphone computational wonderstuff with smaller m4/3 cameras.  Full frame as we know could suddenly look quaint and wholly inadequate.

Canon's great whites?

Have you seen the Nikon PF Telephotos? In case you weren't aware, PF is Nikon's version of Canon's DO. And how many years did it take before Canon finally built some wide angle lenses that weren't garbage? For a very long time, Nikon ruled the wide angles and Canon ruled the telephotos, but that was years ago. There will be plenty of professionals on the sidelines of the upcoming summer Olympics shooting with Nikon and Sony telephoto lenses.

I'm well aware. Now Canon rules both.

No, they don't. If Canon is as fantastic as you claim, why are such a significant number of photographers shooting with Nikon?

Canon still has the largest share.

Well, somebody needs to be number one.  But that does not mean that number two, three, etc are inferior in every possible regard.

Beg to differ, ahem.

I am not trying to disparage Canon glass, but you seem to be completely unaware of the fantastic lenses being produced by other manufacturers.

Sigma makes some fine glass, if you ask me. As does Sony and Nikon. But, you've failed to demonstrate how, today, they have more breadth, and depth in offerings. Not yesterday, not tomorrow, today.

Sony has far more mirrorless lenses than Nikon and Canon combined and many are truly excellent. Where is the Canon equivalent to the Nikon 200-500mm f/5.6 or the Nikon 120-300mm f/2.8?

Looking at your previous post in this thread about lens selection, I agree with you to an extent. I like the Z offerings better than the R offerings. If you have to have a "mirrorless" lens, Sony is the best option, and Fuji is the only other option with a complete selection.

Canon, however beats them all with the ability to use EF lenses to their fullest capability.

With a relatively complete native catalog such as Sony, Fuji, or m4/3, how many of the EF lenses are even worth adapting?  I am not saying that the EF lenses are not great, but how many offer something truly unique above the native options?  The EF catalog is very large, but there is a massive amount of duplication.  Currently for sale at B&H are six different 70-200mm zooms, five different 70/75-300mm zooms, four different wide angle zooms, four different 400mm primes, three different 24-105mm zooms.  Looking through the catalog, the only truly unique lenses that warrant adapting to mirrorless are the MP-E 65mm and the TS-E lenses.

I'll buy one or two RF lenses for convenience in walking around. (I have two, but will probably sell the RF 24-105. It's not better or longer enough than the EF 24-70 F4 to give up the macro focus.).

If I get the M6 II, I'll buy two to four M lenses for travel, depending on whether or not I add a superzoom instead of M telephoto and normal zoom.

However, my premium lenses will remain all EF, because I can use them on either the M or the R for different AOVs, and I can use them on a DSLR, which I still prefer on a nice day. No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection.

Sony still sells A mount DSLRs and A mount lenses that can be adapted to their mirrorless cameras.  Nikon soon be launching their Z mount crop mirrorless cameras.

I think the missing qualifier is "No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection if you already own EF mount lenses".

You have to gather although Nikon and Sony will continue to "catch up", Canon won't be standing still. In the same way as Canon "catches up" with sensors, neither will Sony stand still in that same period.

For mirrorless, both Canon and Nikon are playing catch up.

I'm not sure, at least for a still shooter, like me. (Video is too much like work.)

The superior lens selection is a big deal for me, considering the EF catalogue.

How many variations of a 70-200mm lens does one person need?

The dual pixel focus is vastly superior, both from what I have read and personal experience. A good friend of mine is a big Sony fanatic. He shoots mostly video, so he should probably stay that way. We had a side by side test, and the R smokes the Sony on focus speed and accuracy, especially in low light.

I'll take your word for it.

No IQ advantage means anything if your shots are out of focus.

That is why I will absolutely never shoot with a DSLR again.

I have also found that DPP handles noise on Canon files better than other programs, so the DR difference is less if you first de noise in DPP then retouch elsewhere.

I'm hoping the M6 II is a small R. If it is, I want it. I got rid of my 60D when I got the R. I miss having a crop camera to use with my EF lenses.

Ed Rizk Veteran Member • Posts: 3,898
Re: You're kidding, right?
1

nnowak wrote:

Ed Rizk wrote:

nnowak wrote:

RLight wrote:

nnowak wrote:

RLight wrote:

The latest RF 50mm, 85mm f/1.2L's have no peer (f/1.2 lens with that high of performance). Or for that matter, how many other mfgs have f/1.2 primes? Not many. They often stop at f/1.4.

You seem to be forgetting that Nikon even exists. Their Z roadmap lists 35mm f/1.2, 50mm f/1.2 and 85mm f/1.2

I'll be (very) happy if Nikon does this, or even survives to be blunt. Competition is good, but, IMO, Nikon's future is very uncertain.

Nikon's future is no less uncertain than Canon's. Nikon put the brakes on the overabundance of bottom feeder DSLR models years before Canon. Nikon appears to be heading towards a single mirrorless mount for all sensor formats. I am not suggesting Canon is going to fail, but Nikon has been making some smarter long term moves than Canon. I think Nikon's financials have already hit bottom, but I think Canon still has some more pain ahead.

Neither one of those companies has a particularly "uncertain" future. Cameras are not going away. Back in the days of film, camera sales were lower than they are now and still supported several camera companies.

Back in the film days, if you wanted a photo, there was no other option. You needed a camera and film. Now you no longer need a stand alone camera

You don't need a real camera for a snap shot, but you do for anything that requires wide angle, telephoto, low light capability, high magnification, or stopping action.

There will be a smaller selection of cameras by each company and upgrades will come less often.

This is definitely true, but it is too early to predict who or what will be left standing. Here's a hypothetical... Olympus sells off their camera division to Google who then merges all of the smartphone computational wonderstuff with smaller m4/3 cameras. Full frame as we know could suddenly look quaint and wholly inadequate.

That would be interesting.   Why wouldn't they buy or partner with a major company with full frame optics and a large sensor.  You can't digitally manipulate what you can't capture.

Canon's great whites?

Have you seen the Nikon PF Telephotos? In case you weren't aware, PF is Nikon's version of Canon's DO. And how many years did it take before Canon finally built some wide angle lenses that weren't garbage? For a very long time, Nikon ruled the wide angles and Canon ruled the telephotos, but that was years ago. There will be plenty of professionals on the sidelines of the upcoming summer Olympics shooting with Nikon and Sony telephoto lenses.

I'm well aware. Now Canon rules both.

No, they don't. If Canon is as fantastic as you claim, why are such a significant number of photographers shooting with Nikon?

Canon still has the largest share.

Well, somebody needs to be number one. But that does not mean that number two, three, etc are inferior in every possible regard.

Agreed.  Patent and copyright laws dictate that no company will ever be number one at everything.

Beg to differ, ahem.

I am not trying to disparage Canon glass, but you seem to be completely unaware of the fantastic lenses being produced by other manufacturers.

Sigma makes some fine glass, if you ask me. As does Sony and Nikon. But, you've failed to demonstrate how, today, they have more breadth, and depth in offerings. Not yesterday, not tomorrow, today.

Sony has far more mirrorless lenses than Nikon and Canon combined and many are truly excellent. Where is the Canon equivalent to the Nikon 200-500mm f/5.6 or the Nikon 120-300mm f/2.8?

Looking at your previous post in this thread about lens selection, I agree with you to an extent. I like the Z offerings better than the R offerings. If you have to have a "mirrorless" lens, Sony is the best option, and Fuji is the only other option with a complete selection.

Canon, however beats them all with the ability to use EF lenses to their fullest capability.

With a relatively complete native catalog such as Sony, Fuji, or m4/3, how many of the EF lenses are even worth adapting? I am not saying that the EF lenses are not great, but how many offer something truly unique above the native options? The EF catalog is very large, but there is a massive amount of duplication. Currently for sale at B&H are six different 70-200mm zooms, five different 70/75-300mm zooms, four different wide angle zooms, four different 400mm primes, three different 24-105mm zooms. Looking through the catalog, the only truly unique lenses that warrant adapting to mirrorless are the MP-E 65mm and the TS-E lenses.

Those come to mind, of course.  Three of the TSEs are macro lenses.  I had never heard of a TSE macro lens before they came out.   I have seen another since by an off brand maker that I can't think of the name of right now, starting with L.   It may have been around earlier, but doesn't compare optically.

Then there was the above discussion about the 11-24.  The difference between 11 and 12 is just under 10%.   It's not earth shattering, but it's relevant.

Canon has the only auto focus F1.2 lenses.  I don't care about them, but those that do think they are the best lenses in existence.

The huge expensive super telephotos are certainly not for everybody, but if they are for you, your choices are Canon and Nikon.  Canon has the edge, which is the reason they have the biggest share of the pro sports market.

Then there is your point.  How many versions of each focal length lens do you need?  Well, how many income brackets do you want to cater to?  Three of my lenses are expensive.  Four are moderately priced.   The reason is, while I do a little business with my camera, I'm also a hobbyist, and I want to be able to shoot any kind of photograph on a whim.  I spend too much money on camera gear, but I don't want to spend the money for a top notch lens of every type.

Don't forget the interesting cheap Canon lenses.  Both of the pancake lenses are tiny, cheap, and good for the price.  The two new crop macro lenses are cheap, sharp, and have dual built in light that are individually controllable.  How many of those are there?   The RF 35 and the EF 24-70 F4 both are general purpose lenses that have macro capability.   There are better lenses for shooting macro all day, but I like shooting other things and being able to just grab a close up photo of something that is small and interesting.

The mundane cheap Canon lenses are cheaper and sharper than most mundane cheap lenses.

I'll buy one or two RF lenses for convenience in walking around. (I have two, but will probably sell the RF 24-105. It's not better or longer enough than the EF 24-70 F4 to give up the macro focus.).

If I get the M6 II, I'll buy two to four M lenses for travel, depending on whether or not I add a superzoom instead of M telephoto and normal zoom.

However, my premium lenses will remain all EF, because I can use them on either the M or the R for different AOVs, and I can use them on a DSLR, which I still prefer on a nice day. No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection.

Sony still sells A mount DSLRs and A mount lenses that can be adapted to their mirrorless cameras. Nikon soon be launching their Z mount crop mirrorless cameras.

Yes they do.   They just don't have as may of them or as many interesting ones.

I think the missing qualifier is "No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection if you already own EF mount lenses".

Admittedly, that is a factor for me.

You have to gather although Nikon and Sony will continue to "catch up", Canon won't be standing still. In the same way as Canon "catches up" with sensors, neither will Sony stand still in that same period.

For mirrorless, both Canon and Nikon are playing catch up.

I'm not sure, at least for a still shooter, like me. (Video is too much like work.)

The superior lens selection is a big deal for me, considering the EF catalogue.

How many variations of a 70-200mm lens does one person need?

The dual pixel focus is vastly superior, both from what I have read and personal experience. A good friend of mine is a big Sony fanatic. He shoots mostly video, so he should probably stay that way. We had a side by side test, and the R smokes the Sony on focus speed and accuracy, especially in low light.

I'll take your word for it.

Don't take my word for it.   I have yet to see a review that doesn't agree, when it comes to single point focusing.   The Sony is better at figuring out where the eye is, so if you don't know where a person's eye is and want the camera to pick the focus point for you, Sony does that better, as long as it's not too dark.   High end DSLRs and the Sony A9 track action better, as long as it's not too dark.

No IQ advantage means anything if your shots are out of focus.

That is why I will absolutely never shoot with a DSLR again.

I don't know.  I took both out last Sunday.   The OVF is nice on a nice day.   Still, I switched to the EVF several times because of lighting, even in the middle of the day.   You're probably right.

I have also found that DPP handles noise on Canon files better than other programs, so the DR difference is less if you first de noise in DPP then retouch elsewhere.

I'm hoping the M6 II is a small R. If it is, I want it. I got rid of my 60D when I got the R. I miss having a crop camera to use with my EF lenses.

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thunder storm Forum Pro • Posts: 10,139
Re: Regarding Sony...
2

RLight wrote:

I'm not a big fan of the IBIS in the A6500/A6600. From the video demo's I've seen,

Watching how shaky the hands of Gordon Laing are in the final verdict of the A6600 review i think too many people bought him a coffee..... 

it's maybe a stop, if that. DPR has it pegged at 2.5 stops. That's generous, but possible I gather.

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thunder storm Forum Pro • Posts: 10,139
Re: Regarding Sony...

MAC wrote:

thunder storm wrote:

Still..... i think i gonna choose the A6600 over the A6400. Not decided yet.

large investments in crop if you ever go FF

I think the Fro has some good points

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k_vdsaKGa7k&t=64s

In his vision i already made my mistakes buying lenses being not full frame compatible. In his 50-100mm review the Fro said f/1.8 compared to f/2.8 isn't a big deal. In my opinion it is a big deal.

Still, i payed 1700 euro for my sigma f/1.8 zooms.

The SONY FE 70-200MM F/2.8 GM OSS = 2600 euro. And next to that i need a f/2.8 24-70-ish zoom. You can pick the Tamron 28-75 for that, however, the bokeh of this lens isn't great. And still both lenses are 3400 euro combined. With a G-master 24-70 its 4800 combined.

You can compare to full frame bodies, but as soon as you take the glass prices into account it becomes clear there's no free lunch here.

Furthermore: my low light pics often need some DOF, as often it is about more than one person. Often it is about family being together. As soon as you have to stop down to compensate for the thinner dof full frame gives you, the light gathering advantage of full frame is gone. And even with single person portraits there is a limit - at least for me - for how thin the dof should be. One eye in a soup of blur isn't a portrait to me (o.k., i am exaggerating here, but you get my point). My 50-100mm already teaches me i have to stop down more often. (For 18-35mm its still: larger aperture is always better though.)

Full frame is sharper. The sigma's f/1.8 zooms can't rival full frame glass. When a thin DOF is preferred it gathers more light with lower noise levels. For the bodies the value proposition is better. Not going to argue with that.

However, when taking the prices of full frame glass into account it is a whole lot of money for..... a small percentage of my pictures.

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MAC Forum Pro • Posts: 18,487
Re: You're kidding, right?
1

nnowak wrote:

Ed Rizk wrote:

nnowak wrote:

RLight wrote:

nnowak wrote:

RLight wrote:

The latest RF 50mm, 85mm f/1.2L's have no peer (f/1.2 lens with that high of performance). Or for that matter, how many other mfgs have f/1.2 primes? Not many. They often stop at f/1.4.

You seem to be forgetting that Nikon even exists. Their Z roadmap lists 35mm f/1.2, 50mm f/1.2 and 85mm f/1.2

I'll be (very) happy if Nikon does this, or even survives to be blunt. Competition is good, but, IMO, Nikon's future is very uncertain.

Nikon's future is no less uncertain than Canon's. Nikon put the brakes on the overabundance of bottom feeder DSLR models years before Canon. Nikon appears to be heading towards a single mirrorless mount for all sensor formats. I am not suggesting Canon is going to fail, but Nikon has been making some smarter long term moves than Canon. I think Nikon's financials have already hit bottom, but I think Canon still has some more pain ahead.

Neither one of those companies has a particularly "uncertain" future. Cameras are not going away. Back in the days of film, camera sales were lower than they are now and still supported several camera companies.

Back in the film days, if you wanted a photo, there was no other option. You needed a camera and film. Now you no longer need a stand alone camera

There will be a smaller selection of cameras by each company and upgrades will come less often.

This is definitely true, but it is too early to predict who or what will be left standing. Here's a hypothetical... Olympus sells off their camera division to Google who then merges all of the smartphone computational wonderstuff with smaller m4/3 cameras. Full frame as we know could suddenly look quaint and wholly inadequate.

Canon's great whites?

Have you seen the Nikon PF Telephotos? In case you weren't aware, PF is Nikon's version of Canon's DO. And how many years did it take before Canon finally built some wide angle lenses that weren't garbage? For a very long time, Nikon ruled the wide angles and Canon ruled the telephotos, but that was years ago. There will be plenty of professionals on the sidelines of the upcoming summer Olympics shooting with Nikon and Sony telephoto lenses.

I'm well aware. Now Canon rules both.

No, they don't. If Canon is as fantastic as you claim, why are such a significant number of photographers shooting with Nikon?

Canon still has the largest share.

Well, somebody needs to be number one. But that does not mean that number two, three, etc are inferior in every possible regard.

Beg to differ, ahem.

I am not trying to disparage Canon glass, but you seem to be completely unaware of the fantastic lenses being produced by other manufacturers.

Sigma makes some fine glass, if you ask me. As does Sony and Nikon. But, you've failed to demonstrate how, today, they have more breadth, and depth in offerings. Not yesterday, not tomorrow, today.

Sony has far more mirrorless lenses than Nikon and Canon combined and many are truly excellent. Where is the Canon equivalent to the Nikon 200-500mm f/5.6 or the Nikon 120-300mm f/2.8?

Looking at your previous post in this thread about lens selection, I agree with you to an extent. I like the Z offerings better than the R offerings. If you have to have a "mirrorless" lens, Sony is the best option, and Fuji is the only other option with a complete selection.

Canon, however beats them all with the ability to use EF lenses to their fullest capability.

With a relatively complete native catalog such as Sony, Fuji, or m4/3, how many of the EF lenses are even worth adapting? I am not saying that the EF lenses are not great, but how many offer something truly unique above the native options? The EF catalog is very large, but there is a massive amount of duplication. Currently for sale at B&H are six different 70-200mm zooms, five different 70/75-300mm zooms, four different wide angle zooms, four different 400mm primes, three different 24-105mm zooms. Looking through the catalog, the only truly unique lenses that warrant adapting to mirrorless are the MP-E 65mm and the TS-E lenses.

I'll buy one or two RF lenses for convenience in walking around. (I have two, but will probably sell the RF 24-105. It's not better or longer enough than the EF 24-70 F4 to give up the macro focus.).

If I get the M6 II, I'll buy two to four M lenses for travel, depending on whether or not I add a superzoom instead of M telephoto and normal zoom.

However, my premium lenses will remain all EF, because I can use them on either the M or the R for different AOVs, and I can use them on a DSLR, which I still prefer on a nice day. No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection.

Sony still sells A mount DSLRs and A mount lenses that can be adapted to their mirrorless cameras. Nikon soon be launching their Z mount crop mirrorless cameras.

I think the missing qualifier is "No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection if you already own EF mount lenses".

You have to gather although Nikon and Sony will continue to "catch up", Canon won't be standing still. In the same way as Canon "catches up" with sensors, neither will Sony stand still in that same period.

For mirrorless, both Canon and Nikon are playing catch up.

I'm not sure, at least for a still shooter, like me. (Video is too much like work.)

The superior lens selection is a big deal for me, considering the EF catalogue.

How many variations of a 70-200mm lens does one person need?

The dual pixel focus is vastly superior, both from what I have read and personal experience. A good friend of mine is a big Sony fanatic. He shoots mostly video, so he should probably stay that way. We had a side by side test, and the R smokes the Sony on focus speed and accuracy, especially in low light.

I'll take your word for it.

No IQ advantage means anything if your shots are out of focus.

That is why I will absolutely never shoot with a DSLR again.

and until just recently with fuji’s latest models and firmware updates, the older models had trouble focusing in low light

Eg - on the reception dance floor

And for canon m, the reason I waited until the m6ii

I have also found that DPP handles noise on Canon files better than other programs, so the DR difference is less if you first de noise in DPP then retouch elsewhere.

I'm hoping the M6 II is a small R. If it is, I want it. I got rid of my 60D when I got the R. I miss having a crop camera to use with my EF lenses.

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MAC Forum Pro • Posts: 18,487
Re: Regarding Sony...

thunder storm wrote:

MAC wrote:

thunder storm wrote:

Still..... i think i gonna choose the A6600 over the A6400. Not decided yet.

large investments in crop if you ever go FF

I think the Fro has some good points

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k_vdsaKGa7k&t=64s

In his vision i already made my mistakes buying lenses being not full frame compatible. In his 50-100mm review the Fro said f/1.8 compared to f/2.8 isn't a big deal. In my opinion it is a big deal.

I’d agree with you

Still, i payed 1700 euro for my sigma f/1.8 zooms.

i saw a combo deal around Christmas for a lot less

The SONY FE 70-200MM F/2.8 GM OSS = 2600 euro. And next to that i need a f/2.8 24-70-ish zoom. You can pick the Tamron 28-75 for that, however, the bokeh of this lens isn't great. And still both lenses are 3400 euro combined. With a G-master 24-70 its 4800 combined.

too much - reason why I shoot primes and multiple bodies

You can compare to full frame bodies, but as soon as you take the glass prices into account it becomes clear there's no free lunch here.

no free lunch anywhere

but my 35 IS and 100L on FF are amazing for around $2K

Furthermore: my low light pics often need some DOF, as often it is about more than one person. Often it is about family being together. As soon as you have to stop down to compensate for the thinner dof full frame gives you, the light gathering advantage of full frame is gone.

you need a trigger and off camera flash

And even with single person portraits there is a limit - at least for me - for how thin the dof should be.

ff is about getting a useable shot in iso 6400 and iso 12800 light

One eye in a soup of blur isn't a portrait to me (o.k., i am exaggerating here, but you get my point).

i do get it but it is about distance and cropping power also to get those eyes in focus

My 50-100mm already teaches me i have to stop down more often. (For 18-35mm its still: larger aperture is always better though.)

with the 33 mpxls you’ll be able to shoot loose and crop

Full frame is sharper.

yes, very noticible

The sigma's f/1.8 zooms can't rival full frame glass.

but as a pj lens they can get the action

When a thin DOF is preferred it gathers more light with lower noise levels. For the bodies the value proposition is better. Not going to argue with that.

that is why I use a combo - ff and  crop approach

However, when taking the prices of full frame glass into account it is a whole lot of money for..... a small percentage of my pictures.

for me it is necessary to get paid

on the Sony vs canon, canon has the cropping power. Canon has the colors. Canon has DPP

it would be hard for me to move to Sony

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nnowak Veteran Member • Posts: 9,074
Re: You're kidding, right?
1

Ed Rizk wrote:

nnowak wrote:

Ed Rizk wrote:

Neither one of those companies has a particularly "uncertain" future. Cameras are not going away. Back in the days of film, camera sales were lower than they are now and still supported several camera companies.

Back in the film days, if you wanted a photo, there was no other option. You needed a camera and film. Now you no longer need a stand alone camera

You don't need a real camera for a snap shot, but you do for anything that requires wide angle,

My smartphone has a 13mm equivalent camera which is wider than any of my "real" camera lenses

telephoto,

Optical zooms that go to 160mm have had development announcements and should be showing up in phones in less than a year

low light capability,

Google Night Sight has shown some pretty impressive results

high magnification,

no true macro capabilities yet, but close focusing capabilities are good enough for general use

or stopping action.

Smartphones are actually better at this with the ability to pre-buffer frames so you can go back and select the moment.  Smartphones are also capable of shooting slow motion video at 960fps.  That means a 1 second event would play back over 32 seconds.

Smartphones are not even close to replacing all dedicated cameras, but the capabilities are getting very impressive.  Definitely not a replacement for a 1DX and 800mm f/5.6, but good enough to replace a M100 and 15-45mm f3.5-6.3.

There will be a smaller selection of cameras by each company and upgrades will come less often.

This is definitely true, but it is too early to predict who or what will be left standing. Here's a hypothetical... Olympus sells off their camera division to Google who then merges all of the smartphone computational wonderstuff with smaller m4/3 cameras. Full frame as we know could suddenly look quaint and wholly inadequate.

That would be interesting. Why wouldn't they buy or partner with a major company with full frame optics and a large sensor. You can't digitally manipulate what you can't capture.

It was purely a hypothetical.  However, smaller sensors generally allow for faster readout and a m4/3 sensor with Google's magic could rival medium format.  A full frame sensor would be harder to implement and would offer truly unnecessary levels of quality.  There is also the consideration that smaller sensors are much cheaper.

Canon still has the largest share.

Well, somebody needs to be number one. But that does not mean that number two, three, etc are inferior in every possible regard.

Agreed. Patent and copyright laws dictate that no company will ever be number one at everything.

Looking at your previous post in this thread about lens selection, I agree with you to an extent. I like the Z offerings better than the R offerings. If you have to have a "mirrorless" lens, Sony is the best option, and Fuji is the only other option with a complete selection.

Canon, however beats them all with the ability to use EF lenses to their fullest capability.

With a relatively complete native catalog such as Sony, Fuji, or m4/3, how many of the EF lenses are even worth adapting? I am not saying that the EF lenses are not great, but how many offer something truly unique above the native options? The EF catalog is very large, but there is a massive amount of duplication. Currently for sale at B&H are six different 70-200mm zooms, five different 70/75-300mm zooms, four different wide angle zooms, four different 400mm primes, three different 24-105mm zooms. Looking through the catalog, the only truly unique lenses that warrant adapting to mirrorless are the MP-E 65mm and the TS-E lenses.

Those come to mind, of course. Three of the TSEs are macro lenses. I had never heard of a TSE macro lens before they came out. I have seen another since by an off brand maker that I can't think of the name of right now, starting with L. It may have been around earlier, but doesn't compare optically.

I have shot macro in the past by using extension tubes on the TS-E 24mm and TS-E 90mm.  The tilt function is fantastic for working with the thin depth of field at macro distances.  Now, I use an old manual focus micro-Nikkon 105mm f/2.8 on a Kipon T/S adapter.

Then there was the above discussion about the 11-24. The difference between 11 and 12 is just under 10%. It's not earth shattering, but it's relevant.

I think that 1mm was RLight's point.  However, the corners are really, really soft on that lens at 11mm.

Canon has the only auto focus F1.2 lenses. I don't care about them, but those that do think they are the best lenses in existence.

That is true for DSLRs, but not for mirrorless.

The huge expensive super telephotos are certainly not for everybody, but if they are for you, your choices are Canon and Nikon. Canon has the edge, which is the reason they have the biggest share of the pro sports market.

Canon definitely had an advantage with telephoto lenses, but much of the current market share is just from the momentum that was created decades ago with the launch of USM AF.  Today, I think Nikon can go toe to toe with the Canon telephoto lenses, and in some situations, I would say Nikon is ahead.  Basically, telephoto optical quality is no longer a differentiating factor

Then there is your point. How many versions of each focal length lens do you need? Well, how many income brackets do you want to cater to? Three of my lenses are expensive. Four are moderately priced. The reason is, while I do a little business with my camera, I'm also a hobbyist, and I want to be able to shoot any kind of photograph on a whim. I spend too much money on camera gear, but I don't want to spend the money for a top notch lens of every type.

The budget options are the old, unstabilized versions which aren't up to modern standards optically.  Personally, I would just buy a used copy of the modern stabilized lens for what Canon charges for a new copy of the unstabilized lens.  I would definitely not bother to adapt the old, unstabilized 70-200mm f/2.8 to the R.

Don't forget the interesting cheap Canon lenses. Both of the pancake lenses are tiny, cheap, and good for the price.

But are any of them worth adapting vs. a native mirrorless lens?

The two new crop macro lenses are cheap, sharp, and have dual built in light that are individually controllable. How many of those are there? The RF 35 and the EF 24-70 F4 both are general purpose lenses that have macro capability. There are better lenses for shooting macro all day, but I like shooting other things and being able to just grab a close up photo of something that is small and interesting.

I forgot about the macro capabilities of the 24-70mm f/4.  That lens is fairly compact too.

The mundane cheap Canon lenses are cheaper and sharper than most mundane cheap lenses.

Again, are any of them worth adapting vs. a native mirrorless lens?

I'll buy one or two RF lenses for convenience in walking around. (I have two, but will probably sell the RF 24-105. It's not better or longer enough than the EF 24-70 F4 to give up the macro focus.).

If I get the M6 II, I'll buy two to four M lenses for travel, depending on whether or not I add a superzoom instead of M telephoto and normal zoom.

However, my premium lenses will remain all EF, because I can use them on either the M or the R for different AOVs, and I can use them on a DSLR, which I still prefer on a nice day. No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection.

Sony still sells A mount DSLRs and A mount lenses that can be adapted to their mirrorless cameras. Nikon soon be launching their Z mount crop mirrorless cameras.

Yes they do. They just don't have as may of them or as many interesting ones.

I think the missing qualifier is "No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection if you already own EF mount lenses".

Admittedly, that is a factor for me.

It was a factor for me in the past, but I personally hate using lens adapters and now only shoot with native mount lenses.

You have to gather although Nikon and Sony will continue to "catch up", Canon won't be standing still. In the same way as Canon "catches up" with sensors, neither will Sony stand still in that same period.

For mirrorless, both Canon and Nikon are playing catch up.

I'm not sure, at least for a still shooter, like me. (Video is too much like work.)

The superior lens selection is a big deal for me, considering the EF catalogue.

How many variations of a 70-200mm lens does one person need?

The dual pixel focus is vastly superior, both from what I have read and personal experience. A good friend of mine is a big Sony fanatic. He shoots mostly video, so he should probably stay that way. We had a side by side test, and the R smokes the Sony on focus speed and accuracy, especially in low light.

I'll take your word for it.

Don't take my word for it. I have yet to see a review that doesn't agree, when it comes to single point focusing. The Sony is better at figuring out where the eye is, so if you don't know where a person's eye is and want the camera to pick the focus point for you, Sony does that better, as long as it's not too dark. High end DSLRs and the Sony A9 track action better, as long as it's not too dark.

My old M2 with an AF rating of EV+1 was able to grab focus in any situation with enough light to make a decent photo.  I watched some of the Youtube videos comparing the R's AF to Nikon and Sony.  Yes, the R was definitely better by a wide margin, but these looked like insane situations where you would never capture anything close to a decent image.  ISO 100,000 at 1/15 shutter speed?  EV-6 is the same light level as being outside under quarter phase moon (half illuminated).  EV-3 is the same light level as being outside under a full moon.   I don't shoot sports with only moonlight for illumination.

No IQ advantage means anything if your shots are out of focus.

That is why I will absolutely never shoot with a DSLR again.

I don't know. I took both out last Sunday. The OVF is nice on a nice day. Still, I switched to the EVF several times because of lighting, even in the middle of the day. You're probably right.

I have always hated the smaller OVF's on the crop cameras.  I liked the OVF's on the full frame cameras, but once I saw the massive high-res EVF on a Fuji X-T1 I lost all desire to shoot with an OVF.  The latest full frame mirrorless cameras are supposed to be even better.

I have also found that DPP handles noise on Canon files better than other programs, so the DR difference is less if you first de noise in DPP then retouch elsewhere.

I'm hoping the M6 II is a small R. If it is, I want it. I got rid of my 60D when I got the R. I miss having a crop camera to use with my EF lenses.

nnowak Veteran Member • Posts: 9,074
Re: Regarding Sony...

thunder storm wrote:

RLight wrote:

I'm not a big fan of the IBIS in the A6500/A6600. From the video demo's I've seen,

Watching how shaky the hands of Gordon Laing are in the final verdict of the A6600 review i think too many people bought him a coffee.....

Have you noticed if there is any difference in the utility of the IBIS for stills vs. video?  I wonder if the IBIS is perfectly usable for stills, but the algorithms aren't up to the task of the continual movement when shooting video.  I remember some of the early Olympus cameras with IBIS had a lot of trouble when shooting video because the camera got flummoxed when panning.

it's maybe a stop, if that. DPR has it pegged at 2.5 stops. That's generous, but possible I gather.

Ed Rizk Veteran Member • Posts: 3,898
Re: You're kidding, right?

nnowak wrote:

Ed Rizk wrote:

nnowak wrote:

Ed Rizk wrote:

Neither one of those companies has a particularly "uncertain" future. Cameras are not going away. Back in the days of film, camera sales were lower than they are now and still supported several camera companies.

Back in the film days, if you wanted a photo, there was no other option. You needed a camera and film. Now you no longer need a stand alone camera

You don't need a real camera for a snap shot, but you do for anything that requires wide angle,

My smartphone has a 13mm equivalent camera which is wider than any of my "real" camera lenses

telephoto,

Optical zooms that go to 160mm have had development announcements and should be showing up in phones in less than a year

low light capability,

Google Night Sight has shown some pretty impressive results

OK, give me a phone with 4 or 5 lenses from 13 to 150 mm that does as well as a modern crop Canon, and I could live with that for travel.

high magnification,

no true macro capabilities yet, but close focusing capabilities are good enough for general use

or stopping action.

Smartphones are actually better at this with the ability to pre-buffer frames so you can go back and select the moment. Smartphones are also capable of shooting slow motion video at 960fps. That means a 1 second event would play back over 32 seconds.

I’ll take your word for it.

Smartphones are not even close to replacing all dedicated cameras, but the capabilities are getting very impressive. Definitely not a replacement for a 1DX and 800mm f/5.6, but good enough to replace a M100 and 15-45mm f3.5-6.3.

There will be a smaller selection of cameras by each company and upgrades will come less often.

This is definitely true, but it is too early to predict who or what will be left standing. Here's a hypothetical... Olympus sells off their camera division to Google who then merges all of the smartphone computational wonderstuff with smaller m4/3 cameras. Full frame as we know could suddenly look quaint and wholly inadequate.

That would be interesting. Why wouldn't they buy or partner with a major company with full frame optics and a large sensor. You can't digitally manipulate what you can't capture.

It was purely a hypothetical. However, smaller sensors generally allow for faster readout and a m4/3 sensor with Google's magic could rival medium format. A full frame sensor would be harder to implement and would offer truly unnecessary levels of quality. There is also the consideration that smaller sensors are much cheaper.

Canon still has the largest share.

Well, somebody needs to be number one. But that does not mean that number two, three, etc are inferior in every possible regard.

Agreed. Patent and copyright laws dictate that no company will ever be number one at everything.

Looking at your previous post in this thread about lens selection, I agree with you to an extent. I like the Z offerings better than the R offerings. If you have to have a "mirrorless" lens, Sony is the best option, and Fuji is the only other option with a complete selection.

Canon, however beats them all with the ability to use EF lenses to their fullest capability.

With a relatively complete native catalog such as Sony, Fuji, or m4/3, how many of the EF lenses are even worth adapting? I am not saying that the EF lenses are not great, but how many offer something truly unique above the native options? The EF catalog is very large, but there is a massive amount of duplication. Currently for sale at B&H are six different 70-200mm zooms, five different 70/75-300mm zooms, four different wide angle zooms, four different 400mm primes, three different 24-105mm zooms. Looking through the catalog, the only truly unique lenses that warrant adapting to mirrorless are the MP-E 65mm and the TS-E lenses.

Those come to mind, of course. Three of the TSEs are macro lenses. I had never heard of a TSE macro lens before they came out. I have seen another since by an off brand maker that I can't think of the name of right now, starting with L. It may have been around earlier, but doesn't compare optically.

I have shot macro in the past by using extension tubes on the TS-E 24mm and TS-E 90mm. The tilt function is fantastic for working with the thin depth of field at macro distances. Now, I use an old manual focus micro-Nikkon 105mm f/2.8 on a Kipon T/S adapter

I want to try that, the next time I’m feeling prosperous.

Then there was the above discussion about the 11-24. The difference between 11 and 12 is just under 10%. It's not earth shattering, but it's relevant.

I think that 1mm was RLight's point. However, the corners are really, really soft on that lens at 11mm.

That’ a relative term.   I’ve read comments from a lot of people who really like it.   There certainly is not a sharper 11-24.

Canon has the only auto focus F1.2 lenses. I don't care about them, but those that do think they are the best lenses in existence.

That is true for DSLRs, but not for mirrorless.

No.   There are two EF and two RF F1.2 auto focus lenses, both 50 and 85.

The huge expensive super telephotos are certainly not for everybody, but if they are for you, your choices are Canon and Nikon. Canon has the edge, which is the reason they have the biggest share of the pro sports market.

Canon definitely had an advantage with telephoto lenses, but much of the current market share is just from the momentum that was created decades ago with the launch of USM AF. Today, I think Nikon can go toe to toe with the Canon telephoto lenses, and in some situations, I would say Nikon is ahead. Basically, telephoto optical quality is no longer a differentiating factor

It narrows you down to two choices, one of which is Canon.

Then there is your point. How many versions of each focal length lens do you need? Well, how many income brackets do you want to cater to? Three of my lenses are expensive. Four are moderately priced. The reason is, while I do a little business with my camera, I'm also a hobbyist, and I want to be able to shoot any kind of photograph on a whim. I spend too much money on camera gear, but I don't want to spend the money for a top notch lens of every type.

The budget options are the old, unstabilized versions which aren't up to modern standards optically. Personally, I would just buy a used copy of the modern stabilized lens for what Canon charges for a new copy of the unstabilized lens. I would definitely not bother to adapt the old, unstabilized 70-200mm f/2.8 to the R.

Not all are old and unstablized .   The pancakes are newish.   The M and EF-S zooms are all stabilized.

Don't forget the interesting cheap Canon lenses. Both of the pancake lenses are tiny, cheap, and good for the price.

But are any of them worth adapting vs. a native mirrorless lens?

They are, if you want a particular length and don’t want to spend a lot of money.

The two new crop macro lenses are cheap, sharp, and have dual built in light that are individually controllable. How many of those are there? The RF 35 and the EF 24-70 F4 both are general purpose lenses that have macro capability. There are better lenses for shooting macro all day, but I like shooting other things and being able to just grab a close up photo of something that is small and interesting.

I forgot about the macro capabilities of the 24-70mm f/4. That lens is fairly compact too.

The mundane cheap Canon lenses are cheaper and sharper than most mundane cheap lenses.

Again, are any of them worth adapting vs. a native mirrorless lens?

Again, it depends on your price/performance calculations.   If you want to pay more for better, that option is always there with the EF catalogue.

I'll buy one or two RF lenses for convenience in walking around. (I have two, but will probably sell the RF 24-105. It's not better or longer enough than the EF 24-70 F4 to give up the macro focus.).

If I get the M6 II, I'll buy two to four M lenses for travel, depending on whether or not I add a superzoom instead of M telephoto and normal zoom.

However, my premium lenses will remain all EF, because I can use them on either the M or the R for different AOVs, and I can use them on a DSLR, which I still prefer on a nice day. No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection.

Sony still sells A mount DSLRs and A mount lenses that can be adapted to their mirrorless cameras. Nikon soon be launching their Z mount crop mirrorless cameras.

Yes they do. They just don't have as may of them or as many interesting ones.

I think the missing qualifier is "No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection if you already own EF mount lenses".

Admittedly, that is a factor for me.

It was a factor for me in the past, but I personally hate using lens adapters and now only shoot with native mount lenses.

Canon won’t work for you for that reason.

Personally, I have no problem with it.   Adapters are cheap.   I put one on each lens I want to use, or if shooting premium lenses, just put one on the camera and go all EF for the day.

You have to gather although Nikon and Sony will continue to "catch up", Canon won't be standing still. In the same way as Canon "catches up" with sensors, neither will Sony stand still in that same period.

For mirrorless, both Canon and Nikon are playing catch up.

I'm not sure, at least for a still shooter, like me. (Video is too much like work.)

The superior lens selection is a big deal for me, considering the EF catalogue.

How many variations of a 70-200mm lens does one person need?

The dual pixel focus is vastly superior, both from what I have read and personal experience. A good friend of mine is a big Sony fanatic. He shoots mostly video, so he should probably stay that way. We had a side by side test, and the R smokes the Sony on focus speed and accuracy, especially in low light.

I'll take your word for it.

Don't take my word for it. I have yet to see a review that doesn't agree, when it comes to single point focusing. The Sony is better at figuring out where the eye is, so if you don't know where a person's eye is and want the camera to pick the focus point for you, Sony does that better, as long as it's not too dark. High end DSLRs and the Sony A9 track action better, as long as it's not too dark.

My old M2 with an AF rating of EV+1 was able to grab focus in any situation with enough light to make a decent photo. I watched some of the Youtube videos comparing the R's AF to Nikon and Sony. Yes, the R was definitely better by a wide margin, but these looked like insane situations where you would never capture anything close to a decent image. ISO 100,000 at 1/15 shutter speed? EV-6 is the same light level as being outside under quarter phase moon (half illuminated). EV-3 is the same light level as being outside under a full moon. I don't shoot sports with only moonlight for illumination.

I take advantage of the super low light capability for party pictures.    It’s fun and you get a lot more embarrassing pictures of your friends without flash, because they forget about the camera after the second drink.

No IQ advantage means anything if your shots are out of focus.

That is why I will absolutely never shoot with a DSLR again.

I don't know. I took both out last Sunday. The OVF is nice on a nice day. Still, I switched to the EVF several times because of lighting, even in the middle of the day. You're probably right.

I have always hated the smaller OVF's on the crop cameras. I liked the OVF's on the full frame cameras, but once I saw the massive high-res EVF on a Fuji X-T1 I lost all desire to shoot with an OVF. The latest full frame mirrorless cameras are supposed to be even better.

I’m coming around to your point of view on that.   I still want exposure preview in bright light often.

I have also found that DPP handles noise on Canon files better than other programs, so the DR difference is less if you first de noise in DPP then retouch elsewhere.

I'm hoping the M6 II is a small R. If it is, I want it. I got rid of my 60D when I got the R. I miss having a crop camera to use with my EF lenses.

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Ed Rizk

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nnowak Veteran Member • Posts: 9,074
Re: You're kidding, right?
1

Ed Rizk wrote:

nnowak wrote:

Ed Rizk wrote:

nnowak wrote:

Ed Rizk wrote:

Neither one of those companies has a particularly "uncertain" future. Cameras are not going away. Back in the days of film, camera sales were lower than they are now and still supported several camera companies.

Back in the film days, if you wanted a photo, there was no other option. You needed a camera and film. Now you no longer need a stand alone camera

You don't need a real camera for a snap shot, but you do for anything that requires wide angle,

My smartphone has a 13mm equivalent camera which is wider than any of my "real" camera lenses

telephoto,

Optical zooms that go to 160mm have had development announcements and should be showing up in phones in less than a year

low light capability,

Google Night Sight has shown some pretty impressive results

OK, give me a phone with 4 or 5 lenses from 13 to 150 mm that does as well as a modern crop Canon, and I could live with that for travel.

Worst case is 24 months.

high magnification,

no true macro capabilities yet, but close focusing capabilities are good enough for general use

or stopping action.

Smartphones are actually better at this with the ability to pre-buffer frames so you can go back and select the moment. Smartphones are also capable of shooting slow motion video at 960fps. That means a 1 second event would play back over 32 seconds.

I’ll take your word for it.

Smartphones are not even close to replacing all dedicated cameras, but the capabilities are getting very impressive. Definitely not a replacement for a 1DX and 800mm f/5.6, but good enough to replace a M100 and 15-45mm f3.5-6.3.

There will be a smaller selection of cameras by each company and upgrades will come less often.

This is definitely true, but it is too early to predict who or what will be left standing. Here's a hypothetical... Olympus sells off their camera division to Google who then merges all of the smartphone computational wonderstuff with smaller m4/3 cameras. Full frame as we know could suddenly look quaint and wholly inadequate.

That would be interesting. Why wouldn't they buy or partner with a major company with full frame optics and a large sensor. You can't digitally manipulate what you can't capture.

It was purely a hypothetical. However, smaller sensors generally allow for faster readout and a m4/3 sensor with Google's magic could rival medium format. A full frame sensor would be harder to implement and would offer truly unnecessary levels of quality. There is also the consideration that smaller sensors are much cheaper.

Canon still has the largest share.

Well, somebody needs to be number one. But that does not mean that number two, three, etc are inferior in every possible regard.

Agreed. Patent and copyright laws dictate that no company will ever be number one at everything.

Looking at your previous post in this thread about lens selection, I agree with you to an extent. I like the Z offerings better than the R offerings. If you have to have a "mirrorless" lens, Sony is the best option, and Fuji is the only other option with a complete selection.

Canon, however beats them all with the ability to use EF lenses to their fullest capability.

With a relatively complete native catalog such as Sony, Fuji, or m4/3, how many of the EF lenses are even worth adapting? I am not saying that the EF lenses are not great, but how many offer something truly unique above the native options? The EF catalog is very large, but there is a massive amount of duplication. Currently for sale at B&H are six different 70-200mm zooms, five different 70/75-300mm zooms, four different wide angle zooms, four different 400mm primes, three different 24-105mm zooms. Looking through the catalog, the only truly unique lenses that warrant adapting to mirrorless are the MP-E 65mm and the TS-E lenses.

Those come to mind, of course. Three of the TSEs are macro lenses. I had never heard of a TSE macro lens before they came out. I have seen another since by an off brand maker that I can't think of the name of right now, starting with L. It may have been around earlier, but doesn't compare optically.

I have shot macro in the past by using extension tubes on the TS-E 24mm and TS-E 90mm. The tilt function is fantastic for working with the thin depth of field at macro distances. Now, I use an old manual focus micro-Nikkon 105mm f/2.8 on a Kipon T/S adapter

I want to try that, the next time I’m feeling prosperous.

I think I only have $500 invested in the combo.  I always use manual focus for macro and the old Nikon is a very high quality lens.  The whole combo is much smaller, and less expensive, than the TS-E 90mm that I used for the same purpose.

Then there was the above discussion about the 11-24. The difference between 11 and 12 is just under 10%. It's not earth shattering, but it's relevant.

I think that 1mm was RLight's point. However, the corners are really, really soft on that lens at 11mm.

That’ a relative term. I’ve read comments from a lot of people who really like it. There certainly is not a sharper 11-24.

I believe there are sharper 12-24mm lenses though.

Canon has the only auto focus F1.2 lenses. I don't care about them, but those that do think they are the best lenses in existence.

That is true for DSLRs, but not for mirrorless.

No. There are two EF and two RF F1.2 auto focus lenses, both 50 and 85.

Sigma 35mm f/1.2 for Sony.  Nikon Z 50mm f/1.2 and 85mm f/1.2 coming in 2020 and 35mm f/1.2 coming in 2021.  There are also quite a few f/1.2 lenses for crop sensor cameras, but I was assuming you were referring to only full frame.

The huge expensive super telephotos are certainly not for everybody, but if they are for you, your choices are Canon and Nikon. Canon has the edge, which is the reason they have the biggest share of the pro sports market.

Canon definitely had an advantage with telephoto lenses, but much of the current market share is just from the momentum that was created decades ago with the launch of USM AF. Today, I think Nikon can go toe to toe with the Canon telephoto lenses, and in some situations, I would say Nikon is ahead. Basically, telephoto optical quality is no longer a differentiating factor

It narrows you down to two choices, one of which is Canon.

Or Sony with just a couple more big white primes.  They already have a 600mm f/4.0 and 400mm f/2.8 primes as well as 100-400mm and 200-600mm zooms.

Then there is your point. How many versions of each focal length lens do you need? Well, how many income brackets do you want to cater to? Three of my lenses are expensive. Four are moderately priced. The reason is, while I do a little business with my camera, I'm also a hobbyist, and I want to be able to shoot any kind of photograph on a whim. I spend too much money on camera gear, but I don't want to spend the money for a top notch lens of every type.

The budget options are the old, unstabilized versions which aren't up to modern standards optically. Personally, I would just buy a used copy of the modern stabilized lens for what Canon charges for a new copy of the unstabilized lens. I would definitely not bother to adapt the old, unstabilized 70-200mm f/2.8 to the R.

Not all are old and unstablized .

I was only referring to the half dozen 70-200mm lenses currently for sale.

The pancakes are newish. The M and EF-S zooms are all stabilized.

Can't really adapt the M lenses to anything but a M camera.  I have seen a few people adapting the 10-18 and 55-250 to other systems, but not much else for EF-S.

Don't forget the interesting cheap Canon lenses. Both of the pancake lenses are tiny, cheap, and good for the price.

But are any of them worth adapting vs. a native mirrorless lens?

They are, if you want a particular length and don’t want to spend a lot of money.

It is often a trade of size and quality for lower price.

The two new crop macro lenses are cheap, sharp, and have dual built in light that are individually controllable. How many of those are there? The RF 35 and the EF 24-70 F4 both are general purpose lenses that have macro capability. There are better lenses for shooting macro all day, but I like shooting other things and being able to just grab a close up photo of something that is small and interesting.

I forgot about the macro capabilities of the 24-70mm f/4. That lens is fairly compact too.

The mundane cheap Canon lenses are cheaper and sharper than most mundane cheap lenses.

Again, are any of them worth adapting vs. a native mirrorless lens?

Again, it depends on your price/performance calculations. If you want to pay more for better, that option is always there with the EF catalogue.

Or native mirrorless catalogs

I'll buy one or two RF lenses for convenience in walking around. (I have two, but will probably sell the RF 24-105. It's not better or longer enough than the EF 24-70 F4 to give up the macro focus.).

If I get the M6 II, I'll buy two to four M lenses for travel, depending on whether or not I add a superzoom instead of M telephoto and normal zoom.

However, my premium lenses will remain all EF, because I can use them on either the M or the R for different AOVs, and I can use them on a DSLR, which I still prefer on a nice day. No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection.

Sony still sells A mount DSLRs and A mount lenses that can be adapted to their mirrorless cameras. Nikon soon be launching their Z mount crop mirrorless cameras.

Yes they do. They just don't have as may of them or as many interesting ones.

I think the missing qualifier is "No other system offers that flexibility and lens selection if you already own EF mount lenses".

Admittedly, that is a factor for me.

It was a factor for me in the past, but I personally hate using lens adapters and now only shoot with native mount lenses.

Canon won’t work for you for that reason.

Personally, I have no problem with it. Adapters are cheap. I put one on each lens I want to use,

I tried that route, but realized I was carrying around over a pound of adapters.  The space in my bag was roughly equivalent to an entire extra lens.

or if shooting premium lenses, just put one on the camera and go all EF for the day.

More and more, the "premium lenses" will be the mirrorless version.  Every one of the RF lenses has been better than the EF version.

You have to gather although Nikon and Sony will continue to "catch up", Canon won't be standing still. In the same way as Canon "catches up" with sensors, neither will Sony stand still in that same period.

For mirrorless, both Canon and Nikon are playing catch up.

I'm not sure, at least for a still shooter, like me. (Video is too much like work.)

The superior lens selection is a big deal for me, considering the EF catalogue.

How many variations of a 70-200mm lens does one person need?

The dual pixel focus is vastly superior, both from what I have read and personal experience. A good friend of mine is a big Sony fanatic. He shoots mostly video, so he should probably stay that way. We had a side by side test, and the R smokes the Sony on focus speed and accuracy, especially in low light.

I'll take your word for it.

Don't take my word for it. I have yet to see a review that doesn't agree, when it comes to single point focusing. The Sony is better at figuring out where the eye is, so if you don't know where a person's eye is and want the camera to pick the focus point for you, Sony does that better, as long as it's not too dark. High end DSLRs and the Sony A9 track action better, as long as it's not too dark.

My old M2 with an AF rating of EV+1 was able to grab focus in any situation with enough light to make a decent photo. I watched some of the Youtube videos comparing the R's AF to Nikon and Sony. Yes, the R was definitely better by a wide margin, but these looked like insane situations where you would never capture anything close to a decent image. ISO 100,000 at 1/15 shutter speed? EV-6 is the same light level as being outside under quarter phase moon (half illuminated). EV-3 is the same light level as being outside under a full moon. I don't shoot sports with only moonlight for illumination.

I take advantage of the super low light capability for party pictures. It’s fun and you get a lot more embarrassing pictures of your friends without flash, because they forget about the camera after the second drink.

Your just evil.... I like it.

RLight Senior Member • Posts: 4,417
Re: Regarding Sony...
1

thunder storm wrote:

RLight wrote:

I'm not a big fan of the IBIS in the A6500/A6600. From the video demo's I've seen,

Watching how shaky the hands of Gordon Laing are in the final verdict of the A6600 review i think too many people bought him a coffee.....

it's maybe a stop, if that. DPR has it pegged at 2.5 stops. That's generous, but possible I gather.

I drink plenty of coffee myself. I need good IS systems or a fast shutter for best results.

However, his demo demonstrates the need for a 2nd-gen IBIS for crop. 1st gen is just that, 1st gen... Needs improvement.

The A7 III demo's I've seen are more impressive (of IBIS).

Sony clearly can do it, but they aren't investing into it for crop. Figures.

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MAC Forum Pro • Posts: 18,487
Re: Regarding Sony...

RLight wrote:

thunder storm wrote:

RLight wrote:

I'm not a big fan of the IBIS in the A6500/A6600. From the video demo's I've seen,

Watching how shaky the hands of Gordon Laing are in the final verdict of the A6600 review i think too many people bought him a coffee.....

it's maybe a stop, if that. DPR has it pegged at 2.5 stops. That's generous, but possible I gather.

I drink plenty of coffee myself. I need good IS systems or a fast shutter for best results.

However, his demo demonstrates the need for a 2nd-gen IBIS for crop. 1st gen is just that, 1st gen... Needs improvement.

The A7 III demo's I've seen are more impressive (of IBIS).

Sony clearly can do it, but they aren't investing into it for crop. Figures.

Sony will be very canonish going forward to protect their ff

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Edgard Daher New Member • Posts: 2
Re: dpreviewTV: EF-M 22mm F2 not "ideal" for the M6 Mk II?

I wouldn't worry about it,  the 22mm is just a bit less sharp than the 32mm. Go try it in store or check for sample pics on reviews

PerfectMark Regular Member • Posts: 281
Re: Regarding Sony...

MAC wrote:

RLight wrote:

thunder storm wrote:

RLight wrote:

I'm not a big fan of the IBIS in the A6500/A6600. From the video demo's I've seen,

Watching how shaky the hands of Gordon Laing are in the final verdict of the A6600 review i think too many people bought him a coffee.....

it's maybe a stop, if that. DPR has it pegged at 2.5 stops. That's generous, but possible I gather.

I drink plenty of coffee myself. I need good IS systems or a fast shutter for best results.

However, his demo demonstrates the need for a 2nd-gen IBIS for crop. 1st gen is just that, 1st gen... Needs improvement.

The A7 III demo's I've seen are more impressive (of IBIS).

Sony clearly can do it, but they aren't investing into it for crop. Figures.

Sony will be very canonish going forward to protect their ff

Well they are already are. Sony wanted to protect their video cameras so didn't let the ILC division put the latest APSC sensors in the A6600 (ones which can do 4K60). Although amusingly it looks like the sensor division might have sold Fuji one of the newer sensors for the X-A7.

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MAC Forum Pro • Posts: 18,487
Re: Regarding Sony...

PerfectMark wrote:

MAC wrote:

RLight wrote:

thunder storm wrote:

RLight wrote:

I'm not a big fan of the IBIS in the A6500/A6600. From the video demo's I've seen,

Watching how shaky the hands of Gordon Laing are in the final verdict of the A6600 review i think too many people bought him a coffee.....

it's maybe a stop, if that. DPR has it pegged at 2.5 stops. That's generous, but possible I gather.

I drink plenty of coffee myself. I need good IS systems or a fast shutter for best results.

However, his demo demonstrates the need for a 2nd-gen IBIS for crop. 1st gen is just that, 1st gen... Needs improvement.

The A7 III demo's I've seen are more impressive (of IBIS).

Sony clearly can do it, but they aren't investing into it for crop. Figures.

Sony will be very canonish going forward to protect their ff

Well they are already are. Sony wanted to protect their video cameras so didn't let the ILC division put the latest APSC sensors in the A6600 (ones which can do 4K60). Although amusingly it looks like the sensor division might have sold Fuji one of the newer sensors for the X-A7.

interesting

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The Dynamic Ranger
The Dynamic Ranger Regular Member • Posts: 392
Re: dpreviewTV: EF-M 22mm F2 not "ideal" for the M6 Mk II?

Edgard Daher wrote:

I wouldn't worry about it, the 22mm is just a bit less sharp than the 32mm. Go try it in store or check for sample pics on reviews

The 22mm is a great lens. Nitpickers like DPTV guy should simply go buy a top end Leica camera body and a decent 5 thousand dollar lens to take their casual snaps. By the way, maybe he should share his portfolio to show he's more than just an equipment nerd.

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Joe

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