+1But 24MP FF in an R wouldn’t come close to 7DII reach.
7d II is hardly a sports oriented camera. More likely a wildlife camera for people that cannot afford the price and / or heft of a Full Frame pro bodies and lenses. The important parameter to watch is low light sensitivity more than anything else.
Indoor and outdoor night sports assignments will see you cranking up ISO levels in ISO 6400 territories. Just a a thought for you.
Except the 20Mpixel 1DxII needs the 1.4XIII to come close to 7DII reach which means the loss of 1 stop. So if someone is FL limited it is (more or less) a wash at least for bright conditions. Sports photography is a different thing I believe there 1DXII and 1DX are the best!You could say the same for wildlife, which is often done in lower light conditions as well.
Not all sports are shot indoors or at night. You can certainly shoot the 7DII at 6400. Not as clean as the 1DxII or the 5DIV, but close to the 5DIII. Results are certainly acceptable.7d II is hardly a sports oriented camera. More likely a wildlife camera for people that cannot afford the price and / or heft of a Full Frame pro bodies and lenses. The important parameter to watch is low light sensitivity more than anything else.
Indoor and outdoor night sports assignments will see you cranking up ISO levels in ISO 6400 territories. Just a a thought for you.
There is a big difference: wild life photography is often "reach limited", which is why the 7DII is popular. So, FF often has to be cropped down to the size of the 7DII's image, negating the the advantage of the larger area of the FF sensor or alternatively the 7DII image can be downsized to the resolution of FF, regaining S/N at the expense of resolution.You could say the same for wildlife, which is often done in lower light conditions as well.
nope, not even close:Not all sports are shot indoors or at night. You can certainly shoot the 7DII at 6400. Not as clean as the 1DxII or the 5DIV, but close to the 5DIII. Results are certainly acceptable.
| Canon EOS 7D Mark II |
Agreed but to get the reach of 7DII 5DIII needs a 1.4X teleconverter which makes it lose 1 stop so eventually when we need ISO 3200 for 7DII we get ISO 6400 for 5D3 hence the equivalence.nope, note even close:
Canon EOS 7D Mark II
Low light ISO: 1901
Canon EOS 5D Mark III
Low light ISO: 3652
5D III at iso6400 as good as 7DII at iso 3600
acceptability is a relevant term. i would not call 7d ii iso 6400 files being acceptable but each to its own..
absolutely!! but premise remains: I would not use it unless:Agreed but to get the reach of 7DII 5DIII needs a 1.4X teleconverter which makes it lose 1 stop so eventually when we need ISO 3200 for 7DII we get ISO 6400 for 5D3 hence the equivalence.
But these apply when we are FL limited.
In all other cases the 5D3 wins with a difference.
It is not an either or situation. You can use the same super white tele on a 7DII as you do on a FF. Glenn Bartley who is a professional bird photographer and posts excellent shots on CR uses a 7DII and a Canon 600mm f/4 II. I happen to prefer a 5DSR as it is has the same resolution but better IQ at the expense of lower fps, and I like the wider fov. But, there is no fundamental difference between hiking around an APS-C or a FF. In good light, the high resolution FF or the APS-C gives you more reach with the same lens as on a lower mpxel FF, and as the light deteriorates, they converge.absolutely!! but premise remains: I would not use it unless:
I am cash limited and cannot afford a nice super white tele. otherwise, just don't use a x1.4 teleconverter, grab a longer glass instead.
or
cannot afford hiking around a hefty FF setup for one or another reason and need something lighter instead.
So.. In either case 7D II is a compromise. I have not seen much of these cameras on sidelines. I have seen some at airshows where light is abundant.
nope, not even close:
Canon EOS 7D Mark II
Low light ISO: 1901
Canon EOS 5D Mark III
Low light ISO: 3652
5D III at iso6400 is as good as 7DII at iso 3600
acceptability is a relevant term. i would not call 7d ii iso 6400 files being acceptable but each to its own..
nope, not even close:
Canon EOS 7D Mark II
Low light ISO: 1901
Canon EOS 5D Mark III
Low light ISO: 3652
5D III at iso6400 is as good as 7DII at iso 3600
acceptability is a relevant term. i would not call 7d ii iso 6400 files being acceptable but each to its own..
The last 2 years I have used 5DsR which has similar pixel density with the 7DII (but loses in speed and buffer) and it has lower noise thah 7DII at low ISOs just like AlanF mentioned. (Thanks AlanF).absolutely!! but premise remains: I would not use it unless:
I am cash limited and cannot afford a nice super white tele. otherwise, just don't use a x1.4 teleconverter, grab a longer glass instead.
or
cannot afford hiking around a hefty FF setup for one or another reason and need something lighter instead.
So.. In either case 7D II is a compromise. I have not seen much of these cameras on sidelines. I have seen some at airshows where light is abundant.
There's two problems with this approach...Struggling with the idea of an APS-C EOS R – would there be an RF-S mount (a fifth mount for current Canon cameras)? If not, lenses are needlessly large (e.g. the patented 17-70mm f/3.5-5.6 lens would be great for APS-C, but it has a FF image circle and could be significantly smaller with a smaller image circle). Does Canon expect users of an APS-C EOS R would just adapt EF-S lenses? Defeats the purpose of a small body, IMO.
I can certainly see Canon merging the xxD and 7D lines into a 90D that looks a lot like the current 7DII, perhaps with a video feature upgrade, enhanced AF and 12 fps.
There's two problems with this approach...
1: A 90D needs to have a vari angle touchscreen, otherwise 80D owners don't have an upgrade. But having that vari-angle screen automatically means the 90D wouldn't be as durable as a 7DMk2 - wildlife / sports shooters value durability as much as the FPS.
2: A 90D needs that headphone jack. The 80D is the only APS-C DSLR Canon makes that has one. I still insist that Canon need to make the M5 Mk2 have the headphone jack, or alternatively make a new, larger M7 body to fill in the video gap a headphone-jackless 90D would have. This would drive uptake of EF-M for enthusiasts and vloggers especially considering the flood of new EF-M lens patents which should translate to new EF-M glass.
UNLESS CANON IS REDEFINING THEIR PORTFOLIO TO...
A: EF = Professionals, in FF, for DSLR
B: RF = Professionals + Enthusiasts , in both FF and APS-C, for mirrorless
C: EF-M = Enthusiasts + Beginners, in APS-C, for mirrorless
D: EF-S = Enthusiasts + Beginners, in APS-C, for DSLR
...this sort of portfolio would kill off the 7D and 6D, replacing both with RF cameras. This is what I think Canon's direction is since there's no M7 on the rumour mill.
One could be in the EF-S and EF-M camp, where you can start of with an M50 and upgrade to a 90D.
Or, be in the EF and RF camp, starting off with the RP, then upgrading to a 5D.
Both of these let you start adapting and purchasing EF-S or EF lenses early before upgrading your body.
absolutely!! but premise remains: I would not use it unless:
I am cash limited and cannot afford a nice super white tele. otherwise, just don't use a x1.4 teleconverter, grab a longer glass instead.
or
cannot afford hiking around a hefty FF setup for one or another reason and need something lighter instead.
So.. In either case 7D II is a compromise. I have not seen much of these cameras on sidelines. I have seen some at airshows where light is abundant.
The key factor is power, not current or voltage. Constant current with higher voltage means more power. Thus the increased AF motor drive speed with the 1-series. Regardless, your statement about capacity was manifestly incorrect. Capacity includes a time factor (the h in mAh), and is irrelevant in terms of lens focus speed.
So Canon’s slow sensor readout is responsible for the decline of the ILC market? LOL.![]()
Firmware can control a solid state voltage regulator.Interesting, thanks. I doubt it’s a firmware feature, firmware can’t store power. There would have to be a capacitor in bodies with that feature, which is possible.