DPReview.com is closing April 10th - Find out more

New to Canon R7

Started 1 month ago | Discussions
Distinctly Average Senior Member • Posts: 2,527
Re: New to Canon R7

jeffnles1 wrote:

Thanks. So far, I've just taken the defaults on video. I did set it to shoot RAW and Video on card 1 and JPG on card 2.

I only had 1 V90 card from my old camera set up (Kingston 128gb). and several V60. I currently have a 64gb V60 Sony Tough in slot 2 to catch the jpgs. I do want to get some more V90 cards and probably a 256gb for slot 1 and 128gbs for slot 2. Not sure how much difference V90 vs. V60 makes but if I'm buying new cards might as well get the faster ones. My old camera used XQD in slot 1.

Appreciate the response.

Jeff

In my testing not all V90 and v60 cards are made equal. I’ve had v90 cards that only clear the buffer half a second faster than some of my v60 cards. And one v60 that is slower to clear the buffer than a government IT project takes to complete.

OP jeffnles1 Senior Member • Posts: 1,867
Re: Thanks for all the comments and advice.

koenkooi wrote:

jeffnles1 wrote:

Thanks all for the comments and advice. I've taken the camera out on 2 field days and am getting more used to it and starting to figure out what is working, what frustrated me and needed to be changed and getting more familiar with where al the buttons are. As configurable as this camera is, I'm quite sure I will go through several iterations before I settle on ones that work for me.

My intent is to ultimately set C1 for wildlife, C2 for Landscapes and general photography, and C3 for Macro. I may change my mind as time goes by but that's the current thinking.

I can also use C1 for people since the subject tracking setting is easy enough to change on the fly from Animals to People.

I have something similar for the C modes on my R5, but I often forget to propagate a change to all the modes. I changed the 'set default AF point' setting so I could move the focus point manually when engaging the spot-AF override, but I didn't update all C settings. That led to wildly different behaviour between the non-C modes and C modes.

It took me way too long to figure out that C modes can't read my mind and I have to manually do updates when I find a new way of doing things

I hear ya.  I left all the settings on the mode dials (Tv, Av, M, P, etc.) to their factory default.  After I saved to a C1,2,3, etc. I went back and changed the settings back to default on the main mode.  That way I should have a baseline to go back to.

One thing I always found frustrating with the Nikon bodies (I had a D500) was there were no "C1, 2, 3, type settings.  Nikon has shooting banks but if you make any change at all, then that becomes the setting for that shooting bank.  Going to another and then back again does not get you to a baseline.  After a year or so with that camera I had it set up for my shooting and need really had to think much about it again and could just focus on taking photographs.    This is where I want to get with the R7 and assume I will get there.  After all, it is just a camera body.  Getting a setting suite that compliments my shooting will take some time but once I figure it out, I'll probably just Mae minor tweaks for the situation

 jeffnles1's gear list:jeffnles1's gear list
Nikon D7200 Nikon D500 Nikon AF-S Micro-Nikkor 105mm F2.8G IF-ED VR Sigma 1.4x EX DG Tele Converter Tokina 11-20mm F2.8 +3 more
OP jeffnles1 Senior Member • Posts: 1,867
Re: New to Canon R7
1

Distinctly Average wrote:

jeffnles1 wrote:

Thanks. So far, I've just taken the defaults on video. I did set it to shoot RAW and Video on card 1 and JPG on card 2.

I only had 1 V90 card from my old camera set up (Kingston 128gb). and several V60. I currently have a 64gb V60 Sony Tough in slot 2 to catch the jpgs. I do want to get some more V90 cards and probably a 256gb for slot 1 and 128gbs for slot 2. Not sure how much difference V90 vs. V60 makes but if I'm buying new cards might as well get the faster ones. My old camera used XQD in slot 1.

Appreciate the response.

Jeff

In my testing not all V90 and v60 cards are made equal. I’ve had v90 cards that only clear the buffer half a second faster than some of my v60 cards. And one v60 that is slower to clear the buffer than a government IT project takes to complete.

I've noticed that too.  I have found the Sony Tough V60 cards pretty fast.  I did a disk speed read/write test on the Kingston V90 and it was faster read and write than the V60 Sony card but not by a huge margin.

I was an IT project manager for 30+ years (not in government though) and you are absolutely correct on the speed by which government projects are completed.  In my career, I had to wait on a few government projects to complete before I could implement the software we were building.

Jeff

 jeffnles1's gear list:jeffnles1's gear list
Nikon D7200 Nikon D500 Nikon AF-S Micro-Nikkor 105mm F2.8G IF-ED VR Sigma 1.4x EX DG Tele Converter Tokina 11-20mm F2.8 +3 more
MarshallG
MarshallG Veteran Member • Posts: 8,951
Re: Thanks for all the comments and advice.

jeffnles1 wrote:

koenkooi wrote:

jeffnles1 wrote:

Thanks all for the comments and advice. I've taken the camera out on 2 field days and am getting more used to it and starting to figure out what is working, what frustrated me and needed to be changed and getting more familiar with where al the buttons are. As configurable as this camera is, I'm quite sure I will go through several iterations before I settle on ones that work for me.

My intent is to ultimately set C1 for wildlife, C2 for Landscapes and general photography, and C3 for Macro. I may change my mind as time goes by but that's the current thinking.

I can also use C1 for people since the subject tracking setting is easy enough to change on the fly from Animals to People.

I have something similar for the C modes on my R5, but I often forget to propagate a change to all the modes. I changed the 'set default AF point' setting so I could move the focus point manually when engaging the spot-AF override, but I didn't update all C settings. That led to wildly different behaviour between the non-C modes and C modes.

It took me way too long to figure out that C modes can't read my mind and I have to manually do updates when I find a new way of doing things

I hear ya. I left all the settings on the mode dials (Tv, Av, M, P, etc.) to their factory default. After I saved to a C1,2,3, etc. I went back and changed the settings back to default on the main mode. That way I should have a baseline to go back to.

One thing I always found frustrating with the Nikon bodies (I had a D500) was there were no "C1, 2, 3, type settings. Nikon has shooting banks but if you make any change at all, then that becomes the setting for that shooting bank. Going to another and then back again does not get you to a baseline. After a year or so with that camera I had it set up for my shooting and need really had to think much about it again and could just focus on taking photographs. This is where I want to get with the R7 and assume I will get there. After all, it is just a camera body. Getting a setting suite that compliments my shooting will take some time but once I figure it out, I'll probably just Mae minor tweaks for the situation

I tried Custom modes several cameras ago. They weren’t for me. If I shot in C1 and changed a setting, as soon as the camera slept and woke up, my change was lost.  Maybe that’s changed in newer cameras, but I was never clear about what was saved with the C and what was global, so I just gave up on it.

But I’m like that — I try things, and if they don’t work for me, I move on and try something else.

 MarshallG's gear list:MarshallG's gear list
Canon EOS R5 Canon EF 50mm F1.4 USM Canon EF 85mm F1.8 USM Canon EF 16-35mm F2.8L II USM Canon Extender EF 1.4x II +4 more
Distinctly Average Senior Member • Posts: 2,527
Re: Thanks for all the comments and advice.
2

MarshallG wrote:

jeffnles1 wrote:

koenkooi wrote:

jeffnles1 wrote:

Thanks all for the comments and advice. I've taken the camera out on 2 field days and am getting more used to it and starting to figure out what is working, what frustrated me and needed to be changed and getting more familiar with where al the buttons are. As configurable as this camera is, I'm quite sure I will go through several iterations before I settle on ones that work for me.

My intent is to ultimately set C1 for wildlife, C2 for Landscapes and general photography, and C3 for Macro. I may change my mind as time goes by but that's the current thinking.

I can also use C1 for people since the subject tracking setting is easy enough to change on the fly from Animals to People.

I have something similar for the C modes on my R5, but I often forget to propagate a change to all the modes. I changed the 'set default AF point' setting so I could move the focus point manually when engaging the spot-AF override, but I didn't update all C settings. That led to wildly different behaviour between the non-C modes and C modes.

It took me way too long to figure out that C modes can't read my mind and I have to manually do updates when I find a new way of doing things

I hear ya. I left all the settings on the mode dials (Tv, Av, M, P, etc.) to their factory default. After I saved to a C1,2,3, etc. I went back and changed the settings back to default on the main mode. That way I should have a baseline to go back to.

One thing I always found frustrating with the Nikon bodies (I had a D500) was there were no "C1, 2, 3, type settings. Nikon has shooting banks but if you make any change at all, then that becomes the setting for that shooting bank. Going to another and then back again does not get you to a baseline. After a year or so with that camera I had it set up for my shooting and need really had to think much about it again and could just focus on taking photographs. This is where I want to get with the R7 and assume I will get there. After all, it is just a camera body. Getting a setting suite that compliments my shooting will take some time but once I figure it out, I'll probably just Mae minor tweaks for the situation

I tried Custom modes several cameras ago. They weren’t for me. If I shot in C1 and changed a setting, as soon as the camera slept and woke up, my change was lost. Maybe that’s changed in newer cameras, but I was never clear about what was saved with the C and what was global, so I just gave up on it.

But I’m like that — I try things, and if they don’t work for me, I move on and try something else.

Ever since the early cameras, you could have the settings auto update on the C settings. It is an optional feature. It can be annoying when you have left the shutter speed really low, or the aperture closed, get to a site see something and realise just after the moment has passed. Other than that it works great. This is especially true on mirrorless as you instantly see with exposure simulation that your settings are way off.

OP jeffnles1 Senior Member • Posts: 1,867
Re: Thanks for all the comments and advice.

MarshallG wrote:

jeffnles1 wrote:

koenkooi wrote:

jeffnles1 wrote:

Thanks all for the comments and advice. I've taken the camera out on 2 field days and am getting more used to it and starting to figure out what is working, what frustrated me and needed to be changed and getting more familiar with where al the buttons are. As configurable as this camera is, I'm quite sure I will go through several iterations before I settle on ones that work for me.

My intent is to ultimately set C1 for wildlife, C2 for Landscapes and general photography, and C3 for Macro. I may change my mind as time goes by but that's the current thinking.

I can also use C1 for people since the subject tracking setting is easy enough to change on the fly from Animals to People.

I have something similar for the C modes on my R5, but I often forget to propagate a change to all the modes. I changed the 'set default AF point' setting so I could move the focus point manually when engaging the spot-AF override, but I didn't update all C settings. That led to wildly different behaviour between the non-C modes and C modes.

It took me way too long to figure out that C modes can't read my mind and I have to manually do updates when I find a new way of doing things

I hear ya. I left all the settings on the mode dials (Tv, Av, M, P, etc.) to their factory default. After I saved to a C1,2,3, etc. I went back and changed the settings back to default on the main mode. That way I should have a baseline to go back to.

One thing I always found frustrating with the Nikon bodies (I had a D500) was there were no "C1, 2, 3, type settings. Nikon has shooting banks but if you make any change at all, then that becomes the setting for that shooting bank. Going to another and then back again does not get you to a baseline. After a year or so with that camera I had it set up for my shooting and need really had to think much about it again and could just focus on taking photographs. This is where I want to get with the R7 and assume I will get there. After all, it is just a camera body. Getting a setting suite that compliments my shooting will take some time but once I figure it out, I'll probably just Mae minor tweaks for the situation

I tried Custom modes several cameras ago. They weren’t for me. If I shot in C1 and changed a setting, as soon as the camera slept and woke up, my change was lost. Maybe that’s changed in newer cameras, but I was never clear about what was saved with the C and what was global, so I just gave up on it.

But I’m like that — I try things, and if they don’t work for me, I move on and try something else.

Trying things and changing what doesn't work and keeping what does is by far the best way to approach a lot of things in life.

Jeff

 jeffnles1's gear list:jeffnles1's gear list
Nikon D7200 Nikon D500 Nikon AF-S Micro-Nikkor 105mm F2.8G IF-ED VR Sigma 1.4x EX DG Tele Converter Tokina 11-20mm F2.8 +3 more
Keyboard shortcuts:
FForum MMy threads