RickWagoner said:bholliman said:RickWagoner said:Man the D500 just slaughtered the 7d2...it even has bluetooth and tilty screen. 200 buffer with RAW at 10 fps..4k video....DAMN!!!!!!!!! For $2k this thing is a steal esp when you compare it at the going price rite now of $1500 on the 7d2.
Well least you 7d2 owners only have to wait another 4 years for Canon to update it...oops.
Definitely a great camera according to the specs. Not sure it's a huge upgrade from the 7D2 for a stills shooter however, especially with 7D2 prices approaching $1K, roughly 1/2 what the D500 will introduce at.
RAW buffer is actually 79 shots, see the revised press release "while a generous buffer allows for up to 79 shots (14-bit, uncompressed RAW/NEF) to be captured"
The AF system and AF point coverage are very interesting. Looking forward to seeing the hands-on reviews.
even if you compare the 79 frames to the 24 real 7d2 the D500 still pounces. The $1k price is mostly gone now, overall the 7d2 is back up to $1500. How are you not sure of it being an upgrade? it even has tilty touchy screen that Canon said they can not do in the 7d2..not to mention it is a bit lighter and thinner than the 7d2..my bird photographing mouth is on the floor!
ahsanford said:expatinasia said:I am amazed by the D500 announcement. I bet potential buyers of the 5D Mark IV are all crossing their fingers that it will compete with that. Some amazing features for a camera that on launch has a US$ 1,999 RRP.
Apples and oranges. The 5D4 is the Indiana Jones of Canon's lineup -- it's a ~ $3,500 do-everything-well sort of rig.
The D500, though impressive, is a 7D2 killer. Nothing more.
- A
bholliman said:RickWagoner said:bholliman said:RickWagoner said:Man the D500 just slaughtered the 7d2...it even has bluetooth and tilty screen. 200 buffer with RAW at 10 fps..4k video....DAMN!!!!!!!!! For $2k this thing is a steal esp when you compare it at the going price rite now of $1500 on the 7d2.
Well least you 7d2 owners only have to wait another 4 years for Canon to update it...oops.
Definitely a great camera according to the specs. Not sure it's a huge upgrade from the 7D2 for a stills shooter however, especially with 7D2 prices approaching $1K, roughly 1/2 what the D500 will introduce at.
RAW buffer is actually 79 shots, see the revised press release "while a generous buffer allows for up to 79 shots (14-bit, uncompressed RAW/NEF) to be captured"
The AF system and AF point coverage are very interesting. Looking forward to seeing the hands-on reviews.
even if you compare the 79 frames to the 24 real 7d2 the D500 still pounces. The $1k price is mostly gone now, overall the 7d2 is back up to $1500. How are you not sure of it being an upgrade? it even has tilty touchy screen that Canon said they can not do in the 7d2..not to mention it is a bit lighter and thinner than the 7d2..my bird photographing mouth is on the floor!
No doubt the D500 will be a step up from the 7D2, it should be, its 16 months newer.
Not sure a buffer depth of 24 vs. 79 shots would make a huge difference to me. Sure its better, just can't recall needing to fire that many shots without a pause. I'm sure it will be really important to some photographers.
I really don't care about a tilt screen. I would only use that for low angle landscapes, and this isn't a landscape camera.
I'm excited to see the D500 reviews. Raises the bar which is good for all consumers.
My point on the price is I think the 7D2 will still sell well at a significant discount to the D500. Not everybody can spend $2k on a camera.
expatinasia said:ahsanford said:expatinasia said:I am amazed by the D500 announcement. I bet potential buyers of the 5D Mark IV are all crossing their fingers that it will compete with that. Some amazing features for a camera that on launch has a US$ 1,999 RRP.
Apples and oranges. The 5D4 is the Indiana Jones of Canon's lineup -- it's a ~ $3,500 do-everything-well sort of rig.
The D500, though impressive, is a 7D2 killer. Nothing more.
- A
Apples and oranges how? I see a lot of people comparing the D500 to the 7D2 - presumably because of the high fps both have - but in my eyes the D500 has some amazing specs that even 5D Mark IV users will probably want (and hopefully not envy). The D500 is basically a small version of their now flagship 5D, and at a very attractive price. For me that makes the D500 Nikon's Indiana Jones option.
ahsanford said:Sensor. Price Point. Burst Rate. Lens Compatibility.
The D500 is a top-deck crop rig with high burst rate, large buffer and compatibility with Nikon's DX (EF-S) lenses for about $2k. I effectively just described a 7D2. Now the D500 outclasses on the spec sheet in many regards (4K, AF points, bluetooth, bufer size, etc.)
The 5D3, in comparison was a $3500 do-everything pro rig, only compatible with EF glass, etc. That lined up with a D800 at launch and is more in line with a D750 now.
Now, which rig can you do more with? Different question. That very well may straddle the crop / FF divide.
- A
ahsanford said:The D500 is a top-deck crop rig with high burst rate, large buffer and compatibility with Nikon's DX (EF-S) lenses for about $2k. I effectively just described a 7D2. Now the D500 outclasses on the spec sheet in many regards (4K, AF points, bluetooth, bufer size, etc.)
ahsanford said:The D500, though impressive, is a 7D2 killer.
Chaitanya said:Nikon has seriously blown 7D mark II out of water. It also had backlit buttons and hell of lot of wireless connectivity. I hope the idiots at Canon wake up to the new release of D5 and D500
neuroanatomist said:Chaitanya said:Nikon has seriously blown 7D mark II out of water. It also had backlit buttons and hell of lot of wireless connectivity. I hope the idiots at Canon wake up to the new release of D5 and D500
Yep, on buffer depth and probably low ISO DR. And price, with the D500 at nearly double the cost of a 7DII. And it only took Nikon 4-6 years to come up with competitive cameras. And their lenses still come in second. I bet you think Canon is doomed, right? :![]()
dilbert said:The 1.3x crop mode is interesting because it is really a BIF/wildlife type feature (don't know about sports) where the subject is already small in the image, so there isn't any desire or need to capture "lots of blue", etc.
Chaitanya said:neuroanatomist said:Chaitanya said:Nikon has seriously blown 7D mark II out of water. It also had backlit buttons and hell of lot of wireless connectivity. I hope the idiots at Canon wake up to the new release of D5 and D500
Yep, on buffer depth and probably low ISO DR. And price, with the D500 at nearly double the cost of a 7DII. And it only took Nikon 4-6 years to come up with competitive cameras. And their lenses still come in second. I bet you think Canon is doomed, right? :![]()
D500 is 2000$ body only whereas 7D mk ii(after discounts though msrp is still 1800$) is selling for 1500$. So it doesnt cost twice as much but rather only 1.33333333333333...times more. In 2016 if canon doesnt keep up with competion they be digging their own grave. Just look at what happened to Kodak, there is no such thing as too big to fail in competitive world.
Sabaki said:I am once again reminded of Sega when I think of Canon. Sega made brilliant games but their consoles weren't as good as the competition. Canon make superb lenses and their RT flash system is incredible, yet their bodies always seem short on features compared to the competition.
dilbert said:expatinasia said:...
They have done such a great job (at least specs wise) on the D500, that I cannot help but wonder whether it will eat in to some of the traditional D5 market which at launch will cost over three times as much. That's a lot, and could be even greater when the D500 starts to come down a little, which it may do faster than the D5.
...
Better for Nikon to lose a D5 sale to the D500 than to a competitors product.