systemguy
Senior Member
No announcement or hint from Nikon but when would one expect Nikon to replace the Z7 II? with the Z7 III?
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Too soon. The Z9 was announced 3 years ago and the Z8 only 1 1/2 years ago.Why should anyone expect to see a Z7 III? Is something wrong with the II? There hasn't been a Z8II or Z9II yet.
I knew you were going to ask that question.Are there any clairvoyants in this forum? Hello???
Good one.I knew you were going to ask that question.Are there any clairvoyants in this forum? Hello???
I think this is the operative question. Because of the Z8, it no longer makes sense for the Z7iii to just be a higher res version of the Z6iii. That would just put it way close to the Z8, particular if the Z7iii advanced its functionality in a number of ways which it would need to.The one thing I would agree with is that a Z7III that is basically the same as a Z6III but with a 45MP sensor doesn't make much sense with the current Z8 sitting there. Once you get over the $3000 price point, does a couple hundred dollars make a difference? Would I buy a Z7III simply to save a couple hundred dollars and a little bit in size and weight? I'd rather have the Z8.
So does a Z8II go upscale to make room for a Z7 upgrade? Or does the Z7 take a fork in the road and abandon the higher MP twin relationship with the Z6?
I definitely agree - I should have added a statement that the 60MP or high resolution sensor would have to have the same speed advantage as the 45MP currently found in the Z9/8, which is probably not going to happen. I do think it is perfectly reasonable Nikon keeps the 45MP sensor in place and offers improvements to other areas of the camera.I would doubt that both models would be sensor compatible as easily as described here.It is tough to find where the z7iii would fit in the Nikon lineup with the Z8.No announcement or hint from Nikon but when would one expect Nikon to replace the Z7 II? with the Z7 III?
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If Nikon develops a higher resolution sensor (~60MP), I would presume they would slide that into their flagship Z9ii which might be released end of next year. They would then likely port that to the Z8ii. Perhaps Nikon is working on a sensor with nosebleed type resolution (80MP+) and if so, that would present value in having the Z7iii in the lineup.
One alternative where the Z7iii makes sense: Nikon introduces the Z7iii with a 60MP sensor in early 2025. They capture a lot of sales early in the year and then release the Z9 with the same sensor and Expeed 8 late 2025. Nikon might be able to maximize their sales with this strategy.
The dearth of rumors is not looking like anything is in the pipeline...but, you never know.
A Z9 successor will basically have the same orientation, which is only possible with a fully stacked sensor.
There's definitely no going back and I'm not sure whether we'll see a fully stacked 60+ MP sensor with sufficiently fast read out speed for a Z9II by the end of 2025.
Even if we do, it will be very expensive and will hardly serve as a simultaneous solution for a Z7III, let alone be used in one as the first camera body.
So I don't see any compatibility between the possible sensors for a Z7III and a Z9II at the moment.
A Z9II will not exist without the power of a fully stacked sensor, which is not to be assumed for a possible Z7III, it's the field of the Z8 and Z9.
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I could even imagine an intermediate step that goes in a similar direction to the competition with the Canon R1, or Sony's A9III.
So a Z9 absolute high-speed version with a sensor that has less data volume than the current 45MP stacked sensor and thus releases the very last handbrake.
Even if the efforts lead to a body with global shutter in the future, we will probably see this for the time being with less high-resolution sensors, as with the A9III.
I don't see 60MP and more, fully stacked and fast enough for a potential Z9II on the horizon.
So I would almost expect a high-speed Z9 version or a sensor solution comparable to the current one, but I doubt whether very high-resolution sensors of 60+ MP will be fast enough for a Z9II in the foreseeable future (end of 2025).
I don't know. Based on that logic, was there anything wrong with the Z6 II? Why should anyone have expected to see a Z6 III?Why should anyone expect to see a Z7 III? Is something wrong with the II? There hasn't been a Z8II or Z9II yet.
I'm on record as predicting:
- The Z5 may not get an update. Nikon milked the D600 for 10+ years, and the Z5 still has the D600's image sensor, which keeps costs way down. Alternatively, a Z5II wouldn't appear until a Z4 can take its place as a low-cost entry model.
- The Z7III update is linked with the Z8II update. Both can't be 45mp/EXPEED7 cameras. Scenario #1: Z7III becomes a 61mp+ slow-working landscape/travel camera. Scenario #2: Z7III waits for the Z8II to become fast 61mp+/EXPEED8 camera before it can take over the 45mp/EXPEED7 slot.
With Expeed7 the Z7iii would go as fast as the sensor would allow. For it to perform in Z8 territory it would have to have the Z8's sensor, as the Z8 uses dual superfast output channels, one for the AF/EVF, and one for the image file processing. If the Z7iii were to use a single output channel semistacked sensor like the Z6iii, it would perform somewhat slower than the Z6iii because of the higher resolution (more data output). If it were to use a nonstacked sensor like the Zf, it would perform somewhat slower than the Zf.Boosting the AF with an Expeed 7 for the Z7 III would put it into Z8 territory. Nikon being too conservative as it usually is doesn't want to bleed off sales for the Z8 with an improved Z7 III. So it will appear when the top of the line gets Expeed 8 CPU's and higher resolution viewfinders.
BTW, the Expeed 8 will permit much faster data throughput so expect higher speed burst rates and higher frame rates for Video modes. Note more processing capacity might allow the viewfinders to go "live" during burst shooting so you see what you are recording without any lag. One thing I would like to see done with the Z8 and Z9 is much more internal memory, perhaps in the range of 1-3 Tb. That would allow what would be essentially bottomless shot buffers.
Sarcasm ??Why should anyone expect to see a Z7 III? Is something wrong with the II?
By now.No announcement or hint from Nikon but when would one expect Nikon to replace the Z7 II? with the Z7 III?
And my scenario 3, is a mix between the two. Said this in another thread, for this EXPEED7 generation, I'd like to see them put the now old and slow 45MP sensor in a dumbed down Z5 type body. This way you make it different enough from both the Z8 and the Z6iii. They can use the very same body and swap the sensor and processor out just to update it to keep up with the times.Thom's take... came out a few days ago. His "scenario 1" seems more likely to me (just speculation of course).
https://www.zsystemuser.com/nikon-z-system-news-and/the-z-camera-update-timelin.htmlI'm on record as predicting:
- The Z5 may not get an update. Nikon milked the D600 for 10+ years, and the Z5 still has the D600's image sensor, which keeps costs way down. Alternatively, a Z5II wouldn't appear until a Z4 can take its place as a low-cost entry model.
- The Z7III update is linked with the Z8II update. Both can't be 45mp/EXPEED7 cameras. Scenario #1: Z7III becomes a 61mp+ slow-working landscape/travel camera. Scenario #2: Z7III waits for the Z8II to become fast 61mp+/EXPEED8 camera before it can take over the 45mp/EXPEED7 slot.
Just an aside, but the only thing the Z5 body is really missing is the top deck LCD, CF card support, and a few mm in width compared to a Z6ii/Z7ii body. Oh, and that full size HDMI port. With Expeed7, nothing in the Nikon lineup I'd consider "dumbed down" as was common in the DSLR era, particularly for stills. From Z50 to Z9, the primary features difference between cameras is now just speed and pro video support.And my scenario 3, is a mix between the two. Said this in another thread, for this EXPEED7 generation, I'd like to see them put the now old and slow 45MP sensor in a dumbed down Z5 type body. This way you make it different enough from both the Z8 and the Z6iii. They can use the very same body and swap the sensor and processor out just to update it to keep up with the times.
The Z9, Z8, and Z6iii bodies are the functional workhorses that come with full sized HDMI ports. The Zf, Z5 will be our casual, entry level bodies.
Then they will see the reception of this resolution body. If there are enough people who cares enough about resolution even with a dumbed down body, then they might bring back the Z7iii in some form with EXPEED8, after the Z8ii and before the Z6iv.
Not sure where you're taking this from.Just an aside, but the only thing the Z5 body is really missing is the top deck LCD, CF card support, and a few mm in width compared to a Z6ii/Z7ii body. Oh, and that full size HDMI port.And my scenario 3, is a mix between the two. Said this in another thread, for this EXPEED7 generation, I'd like to see them put the now old and slow 45MP sensor in a dumbed down Z5 type body. This way you make it different enough from both the Z8 and the Z6iii. They can use the very same body and swap the sensor and processor out just to update it to keep up with the times.
The Z9, Z8, and Z6iii bodies are the functional workhorses that come with full sized HDMI ports. The Zf, Z5 will be our casual, entry level bodies.
Then they will see the reception of this resolution body. If there are enough people who cares enough about resolution even with a dumbed down body, then they might bring back the Z7iii in some form with EXPEED8, after the Z8ii and before the Z6iv.
indeed, but that I was talking about the body design here, not the internal specs.The sensor is also different, with the Z5 having a slower readout speed and probably a bit more noise as it’s not BSI.