Bruce Oudekerk
Veteran Member
I’ll turn that question around. If Sony can NOT think of an a9x feature set that will distinguish that camera significantly from its a7x counterpart…they are doomed as a technology leader. Stalling technologically will eventually happen as mirrorless matures of course but not now nor in the near future.No. The A9 is really about speed and action. Would we have 20fps if we had A9R? I doubt it. And not at this time.If you would have to guess - will there be A9R?
Exactly. IF one can't answer that, then the A7R3 is sufficient enough. The question is, what would you put in the theoretical A9R that would make it an R? And something that the A7R3 can't do?If yes, what advantages/improvements over A7R3 would you ask for?
I may not be able to see the whole picture, but I don't see any compelling reason for an A9R.
The other this is Sony wants to make the A9 stand out as the sole best camera they have. Having an A9R dilutes it. Same way that there is only one D1x or D5 line. And if Sony is to make a statement in the 2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics, the A9 must stand alone as the only camera in that line. Most likely that will be an A92 in 2020, but it is still the A9. No R's. No S'. After 2020, the door is open and you can dream of an A9R. Or A9s. But if you ask me, what will make those models different or better than the A7 counterparts (price not counting)? If one cannot answer that convincingly, then there is no reason to make an A9R or A9s. The A7 family will be more affordable to for many and not out of reach if it were an A9.
If that is your feature, what prevents the A7R4 from having that? Why would it take an A9 family to give you that? And if you notice, DR is something tSony end to advance to all models if possible as the technology is available. It is not a basis of differentiation. They put the latest in the sensor and pass it on to the next version even if it is an aps-c body. You have to have a more compelling feature to make it an A9 body.For me, higher sensor resolution without DR compromise - for cropping.
A recap from what i glean from others and from what i think is possible... which admittedly isn't worth much. My crystal ball is fallible but it says the a9R won’t come out for awhile, maybe a year +/- and thus will have time to develop second generation a9 level focus acquisition accuracy and focus speed. Which of course they were working on a while back. AND the a9 is already a bit faster than the excellent a7RIII at its focusing. This will be just that much better. Absolutely the a9R will have absurd ultra high resolution. I suspect this camera will be targeting a much smaller group of high end photographers; some of the I’ll-never-leave-medium-format crowd that love the new versatility FF brings, ultra critical landscape photographers, many wildlife photographers and even some of the sports shooters that need to crop and don’t need 20f/s. It will have silent and minimal rolling shutter which is important for the press photographers when the politicians are running away. A 70+MP camera has massive throughput needs and it is its responsiveness NOT frames per second that are WAY past the capabilities of this gen a7RIII. Many will find a way to use a buffer that flushes fast. It will use the expensive stacked BSI sensor and next gen LSI to get its game. I don’t need or want this camera but if Sony builds it, ‘they will come’ and it will cost $5000 which is NOT in a7R territory. The a7R series must be introduced at ball park $3200 as that is its niche. I bet it even has an intervalometer built in
As I’ve also said elsewhere in this thread, there is also room for an a9s too, especially if it has a global shutter with its absolutely zero rolling shutter issues in fully electronic shutter mode. It might have a price tag initially of 5 figures …certainly $8K or more and it will be a steal compared to the pro cinema gear with global shutter. And speaking of 8K it won’t likely produce 8K video since even their $45K CineAlta Venice camera won’t do that. Sony is makings some tiny global sensors however, so their foot is in that door. Its coming someday even if my guess is way off. When it does come, I’m expecting to hear stories of video/photographers raiding nursing homes and pulling their grandmother's gold teeth to get a down payment. No a7s variant will command that kind of money. Period.
I see the difference in a7 and a9 variant cameras as the a9x getting a large performance boost via cutting edge and expen$ive technology… This can be, but isn’t necessarily, sports camera oriented. We have to wait and see who’s right. Whatever, like I said…if Sony builds it, they will come. At what I see as a likely price point, the ‘they’ just won’t be me.
Bruce