"I shoot Canon for the glass"
AMEN.
Better IQ with a sensor upgrade from the 70D is what I feel is a reasonable expectation for Canon's flagship APS-C format rig. I'm willing to bet that the most popular lens used in tandem (or at least of the top most popular, especially in the zoom category) is the 70-200IS Mk II or some earlier variant, which is one of Canon's crown jewels in the entire universe of pro glass. I know I use the hell outta mine.
Stepping up higher ISO performance was probably at the top of their to-do list when redesigning this camera, but anyone salivating over "near 5DIII" ISO performance is, I'm sorry, deluding themselves. It's still a limitation of physics of Crop vs. Full Frame. We have to be reasonable. That said, certainly there is still room to grow on a crop format and I trust Canon will answer this call after 5 years of stepped up tech advancements and whatnot.
All this debate is academically stimulating but once the camera hits with known variables, a whole new debate begins that renders this little more than playtime.
My sharpest and most used glass is my Sigma 35mm and 50mm ART 1.4s. I'd love to see them get notably more resolve on a new updated crop body, but they are no slouch now. Earlier someone opined about "waxy" 7D files. I don't know what that means. My 7D kills it for a crop, even when I was using an old 90mm Tamron Macro 172E (something like 3 generations ago of that lens).
Of course, when I'm shooting portraiture and artwork, i'm firing a 6D, which I also adore, but I can't reasonably compare that to crop.
I'm a Canon lover, but I'm also a realist. Canon needs to knock this out the park regardless of current market share. I don't want to watch Rome burn while Japan fiddles.
AMEN.
Better IQ with a sensor upgrade from the 70D is what I feel is a reasonable expectation for Canon's flagship APS-C format rig. I'm willing to bet that the most popular lens used in tandem (or at least of the top most popular, especially in the zoom category) is the 70-200IS Mk II or some earlier variant, which is one of Canon's crown jewels in the entire universe of pro glass. I know I use the hell outta mine.
Stepping up higher ISO performance was probably at the top of their to-do list when redesigning this camera, but anyone salivating over "near 5DIII" ISO performance is, I'm sorry, deluding themselves. It's still a limitation of physics of Crop vs. Full Frame. We have to be reasonable. That said, certainly there is still room to grow on a crop format and I trust Canon will answer this call after 5 years of stepped up tech advancements and whatnot.
All this debate is academically stimulating but once the camera hits with known variables, a whole new debate begins that renders this little more than playtime.
My sharpest and most used glass is my Sigma 35mm and 50mm ART 1.4s. I'd love to see them get notably more resolve on a new updated crop body, but they are no slouch now. Earlier someone opined about "waxy" 7D files. I don't know what that means. My 7D kills it for a crop, even when I was using an old 90mm Tamron Macro 172E (something like 3 generations ago of that lens).
Of course, when I'm shooting portraiture and artwork, i'm firing a 6D, which I also adore, but I can't reasonably compare that to crop.
I'm a Canon lover, but I'm also a realist. Canon needs to knock this out the park regardless of current market share. I don't want to watch Rome burn while Japan fiddles.
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