I don't have the camera or an ultra fast lens, but maybe someone else around here who does also has the same curiosity?
The backside illuminated sensor on the A7RII is supposed to clear up a lot of space on the sensor for light gathering, and supposedly a lot of that circuitry on regular sensor designs gets in the way with wide apertures.
One of the biggest questions I've had ever since hearing about this camera is whether or not it produces the same exposure values at f1.2 as older sensor designs (or if you have an f1.0 lens to test that would be even better).
Apparently Canon uses a digital profile to adjust ISO accordingly and compensate, so ideally there should be no communication between the camera and the lens (an extension tube or taped pins should do the trick).
It would be amazing to see if the A7RII actually gets around this classic limitation of digital sensors, as it would open the industry for the possibility of making f1.0 lenses again.
The backside illuminated sensor on the A7RII is supposed to clear up a lot of space on the sensor for light gathering, and supposedly a lot of that circuitry on regular sensor designs gets in the way with wide apertures.
One of the biggest questions I've had ever since hearing about this camera is whether or not it produces the same exposure values at f1.2 as older sensor designs (or if you have an f1.0 lens to test that would be even better).
Apparently Canon uses a digital profile to adjust ISO accordingly and compensate, so ideally there should be no communication between the camera and the lens (an extension tube or taped pins should do the trick).
It would be amazing to see if the A7RII actually gets around this classic limitation of digital sensors, as it would open the industry for the possibility of making f1.0 lenses again.