Are These The EOS 7D Mark II Specifications?

Sporgon said:
@jrista; when you e mail Canon demanding that they improve their sensor's IQ be sure to include those 500px images as an example of what the D800 and do ;)

I'll be sure to. Although I'm quite certain Canon knows about their own limitations. I'm not worried they don't know. I'm frustrated by the fact that they haven't done anything about it, because I am sure they know. Worse, given the patents they've been granted recently, they seem to have technology that would solve the problem (and have had it for years, most of the filing dates were at least a couple years ago)...they just aren't using it.
 
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All this endless debate about dynamic range and camera sensors remind me of a similar situation nearly a decade ago. Back then, Canon CMOS sensors clearly ruled the high ISO arena. Yet, you'll run into countless arguments by Nikon/Olympus/Pentax/Minolta users:

(i) who needs sensors with high ISO performance when there is always the flash, and Canon's flash system is deemed inferior

(ii) Canon images in comparison to those produced by Sony sensors are 'too waxy, buttery and smooth'

(iii) careful NR is all one needs

Ten years later, we are back with our places switched. ;D
 
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jrista said:
... given the patents they've been granted recently, they seem to have technology that would solve the problem (and have had it for years, most of the filing dates were at least a couple years ago)...they just aren't using it.

Can this be related to the new plants Canon set up in Japan and Taiwan? It's possible they have run into production problems.

On a side note, Canon has indicated their plans to automate most of their production process. Some people have taken this as a sign that they will switch to mirrorless cameras once the plants are ready...
 
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canonic said:
Canon knows for sure about its DR limitations, they dont need any proof. If anyway, then, Sonys A7R sales are the proof.

To be fair, I don't think the Sony A7 sales is that great. Certainly not according to BCNRanking and Amazon bestseller lists. Mind you, Sony is selling lots of NEX and A6000 cameras though.
 
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These 5Ds must have been specially modified;

http://500px.com/photo/37646388/land-of-the-setting-sun-by-robert-bynum
http://500px.com/photo/37251814/cape-arago-orcas-by-robert-bynum
http://500px.com/photo/69529953/the-golden-triangle-by-sairam-sundaresan
http://500px.com/photo/73747351/walt-whitman-+-freedom-pier-by-darren-loprinzi
http://500px.com/photo/59451838/baladrar-by-pedro-josé-benlloch-nieto
 
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Sporgon said:
These 5Ds must have been specially modified;

http://500px.com/photo/37646388/land-of-the-setting-sun-by-robert-bynum
http://500px.com/photo/37251814/cape-arago-orcas-by-robert-bynum
http://500px.com/photo/69529953/the-golden-triangle-by-sairam-sundaresan
http://500px.com/photo/73747351/walt-whitman-+-freedom-pier-by-darren-loprinzi
http://500px.com/photo/59451838/baladrar-by-pedro-josé-benlloch-nieto

the first 2 look like sharp line ND grads
 
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jrista said:
edit...
This has NOTHING to do with DXO here, BTW. Just to be very clear. This has everything to do with WHAT PHOTOGRAPHERS ARE ACHIEVING IN REAL LIFEa with the D800. I posted actual real world, artistic photographic examples, not some lab test of a step wedge or a bunch of numbers on paper (things you guys are often ragging on me about) and you guys are STILL denying it. Well...I guess what they say is true. Denial is the most predictable of human behaviors...

Golly Jon, how'd you end up in this scrap? ;)

here's one of my examples from 2 years ago that's a nice match for your sun-water example.
i could have pushed the foreground even lighter but then it looked phoney, not noisy.
Shots like this, and the extreme ease of post-processing, is why I dumped most of my Canon gear and went with Exmor-based goodies. i like shooting into the sun! I don't like spending a lot of time mucking around with NR software if I can easily avoid it. ... Now I can, since 2012.

www.canonrumors.com/forum/index.php?topic=8105.msg161888#msg161888

and here's another, the shadowed bank and tree-trunks were far too dark in the as-shot image to make the shot look interesting. Was also the 14mm end of 14-24, FWIW.

www.canonrumors.com/forum/index.php?topic=9082.msg172770#msg172770

to steal the plot line from a commercial...

money spent on changing over, a few $k difference.
effort in learning the new system, mild to moderate

time and hassle avoided, priceless
 
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Aglet said:
Sporgon said:
These 5Ds must have been specially modified;

http://500px.com/photo/37646388/land-of-the-setting-sun-by-robert-bynum
http://500px.com/photo/37251814/cape-arago-orcas-by-robert-bynum
http://500px.com/photo/69529953/the-golden-triangle-by-sairam-sundaresan
http://500px.com/photo/73747351/walt-whitman-+-freedom-pier-by-darren-loprinzi
http://500px.com/photo/59451838/baladrar-by-pedro-josé-benlloch-nieto

the first 2 look like sharp line ND grads

Don't think so; not the first one anyway. The give away in the first one is the really bad lateral chromatic aberrations caused by some severe overexposure during one of the stages of the pictures completion.
 
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Sporgon said:
These 5Ds must have been specially modified;

http://500px.com/photo/37646388/land-of-the-setting-sun-by-robert-bynum
http://500px.com/photo/37251814/cape-arago-orcas-by-robert-bynum
http://500px.com/photo/69529953/the-golden-triangle-by-sairam-sundaresan
http://500px.com/photo/73747351/walt-whitman-+-freedom-pier-by-darren-loprinzi
http://500px.com/photo/59451838/baladrar-by-pedro-josé-benlloch-nieto

Well, tough to consider those single shots when the descriptions read like:

"Combination of three shots taken a few minutes apart. One exposure for the sky, one for the water and rocks, and another to capture the orcas." (Second link.)

The third one clearly has an artificial sun.

The fourth appears to use a GND, and also appears to have an artificial sun.

The fifth one also appears to use a GND, and still has very deep shadows in the foreground.

The only one there that seems to be a legit single shot is the first one.


Don't get me wrong. They are all excellent photos, wonderful pieces of art. However, they still aren't the same as the D800 photos. They aren't showing off the capabilities of having massive dynamic range.
 
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Aglet said:
jrista said:
edit...
This has NOTHING to do with DXO here, BTW. Just to be very clear. This has everything to do with WHAT PHOTOGRAPHERS ARE ACHIEVING IN REAL LIFEa with the D800. I posted actual real world, artistic photographic examples, not some lab test of a step wedge or a bunch of numbers on paper (things you guys are often ragging on me about) and you guys are STILL denying it. Well...I guess what they say is true. Denial is the most predictable of human behaviors...

Golly Jon, how'd you end up in this scrap? ;)

I mentioned that I wanted more DR, and that I thought Canon was screwing themselves into the ground by ignoring the massive differences between themselves and...just about everyone else. I'm now a DRone. :P Guess that's all it takes.

Fine with me, though. I'll pick up a D810 and a 14-24 at some point for my landscapes (it's really tough, buying for both terrestrial and astro photography...you really pick and choose what to buy and when...so God only knows when I'll actually buy the darn thing.) I'm sure I'll be happy with it as well...it's not like landscapes need a kick-ass AF system, or even a meter. I won't be holding the camera, it'll be on a tripod. And so long as live view works, and so long as I can tether the darn thing and use my tablet as a giant live view screen...I won't have a major problem with the ergonomics or menu system.

I'm just tired of waiting for Canon to get off their ass and produce the camera I REALLY want with high DR and high megapixels. I'd MUCH prefer it be Canon, but I just don't think it's going to happen. Not within the next couple of years anyway.

Aglet said:
here's one of my examples from 2 years ago that's a nice match for your sun-water example.
i could have pushed the foreground even lighter but then it looked phoney, not noisy.
Shots like this, and the extreme ease of post-processing, is why I dumped most of my Canon gear and went with Exmor-based goodies. i like shooting into the sun! I don't like spending a lot of time mucking around with NR software if I can easily avoid it. ... Now I can, since 2012.

www.canonrumors.com/forum/index.php?topic=8105.msg161888#msg161888

and here's another, the shadowed bank and tree-trunks were far too dark in the as-shot image to make the shot look interesting. Was also the 14mm end of 14-24, FWIW.

www.canonrumors.com/forum/index.php?topic=9082.msg172770#msg172770

to steal the plot line from a commercial...

money spent on changing over, a few $k difference.
effort in learning the new system, mild to moderate

time and hassle avoided, priceless

Yeah, it's the ease of processing that is so appealing. I've done more than my fair share of NR. Hell, I've used some of the most advanced tools on earth for performing NR with astro and PixInsight. I really hate it. I spend so many freakin hours removing noise from my photos...and when you can take many dozens or hundreds of photos in a single outing, and so many of them are good compositionally and everything...having to spend time mucking around with banding and color blotches and whatnot just gets OLD. Really OLD. And it never measures up. There is still grain, there is still a loss of color fidelity, there is still a loss of detail (often a significant loss). I'm just tired of it. I love the 5D III for wildlife, and assuming I can find any more birds this year (it's been a bit of a dead year for birds), I'm sure it will do more fine for birds as well. But landscapes? It's not really any better than the 5D II. It still has banding, and the color blotchiness seems even worse. Really not what I expected. I'll probably be doing a LOT of HDR until I find the right time to pick up a D800. (And even with HDR...that isn't perfect either...you still have to deal with blending artifacts, ghosting, you can't HDR merge anything with moving water in it, fast moving clouds tend to look funky in an HDR merge, etc. etc.)

Maybe the 5D IV will finally be the camera...but...I just don't have any confidence Canon is particularly interested in serving any market other than action. Action shooters are a huge market...but they aren't the sole market, and Canon definitely seems to be ignoring them for the time being.
 
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unfocused said:
No. You attributed Neuro's quote to me and then apparently couldn't figure out to attribute my real quotes to me.

I just quickly quoted something that you said you agreed with and it's been a horrible two days and i'm tired and worse and didn't tkae the time to nest his quote and your agreement.


So, ...., I'm with Neuro on this one.

yeah exactly
was it so terrible I didn't make it explicitly clear that those were his words that you said something like you could not ahve said better yourself when I just fired off a quick response? it's not an official report and having you plagiarism his words didn't think it was the end of the world
have more importnat matters than camera nonsens on my mind now anyway, stuff that i really care about deeply for real
 
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Woody said:
To be fair, I don't think the Sony A7 sales is that great. Certainly not according to BCNRanking and Amazon bestseller lists. Mind you, Sony is selling lots of NEX and A6000 cameras though.

Always really difficult to get sales figures from any camera company. But according to Kakaku (even more telling than Amazon sales as it covers much wider in Japan) seems SONY's A7 is doing really well.

Generally I think Japan likes the small format cameras somewhat more than the US with Europe maybe somewhere in between (?).

EDIT: Forgot to add that for some time Nikon is selling better than Canon in Japan. An interesting reversal compared to previously. That Japanese consumers are very prone to switch to have the "newest" and "brightest" electronics has certainly contributed to this.
 
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Maiaibing said:
EDIT: Forgot to add that for some time Nikon is selling better than Canon in Japan. An interesting reversal compared to previously. That Japanese consumers are very prone to switch to have the "newest" and "brightest" electronics has certainly contributed to this.

source?

last time i checked BNC the most sold DSLR in japan was a canon kiss outselling the NIKON on place two about 2 times. sorry but i don´t find the specific article anymore. but i remember it was 20.x million vs. 10.x million.

but there is this:

http://www.canonwatch.com/canon-undisputed-leader-market-shares-dslr-compact-cameras-japan-bnc-ranking/

so i am curious what your source is and what "for some time" means?
 
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I'd like to know why Nikon is the only one that will put Voice Annotation in other cameras than their flagship?

If the 7DII doesn't have annotation (and I don't want to fake it like I see so many do using the "video record" which will not work too good in PhotoMechanic like an audio file would, then I'll just save my pennies and wait for the 1DxII or whatever it is.

It's just annoying that a feature like that isn't available unless you want to drop $6700. :'(
 
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canonic said:
Sporgon said:
@jrista; when you e mail Canon demanding that they improve their sensor's IQ be sure to include those 500px images as an example of what the D800 and do ;)

Canon knows for sure about its DR limitations, they dont need any proof. If anyway, then, Sonys A7R sales are the proof.

And...there's my morning laugh. ;D


PicaPica said:
so i am curious what your source is and what "for some time" means?

Three years ago I was in Narita Airport (on the way to Beijing), and I saw 8 Nikon cameras but only 3 Canon cameras. So, Nikon has been ahead in Japan for at least three years.
 
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Maiaibing said:
EDIT: Forgot to add that for some time Nikon is selling better than Canon in Japan. An interesting reversal compared to previously. That Japanese consumers are very prone to switch to have the "newest" and "brightest" electronics has certainly contributed to this.

Not according to BCNRanking for the first half of 2014.

I am also curious about your source of info. Granted BCNRanking does not cover small dealers. So, I am wondering if there is anything better than BCNRanking.

Certainly when it comes to worldwide sales, Canon has been leading the pack for interchangeable cameras in the past few years.
 
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MichaelHodges said:
neuroanatomist said:
MichaelHodges said:
If I was in the market, I wouldn't buy into this watered down sales-speak.
It sounds like you're selling Tupperware.

Yeah. I mean...long lenses? Who needs 'em? 200mm is plenty, just get closer. Good flashes and high Xsync speeds? Useless. Servo tracking for moving subjects? Phth – real men use manual focus, and the a6000 has peaking so that's even better!

You don't have to convince me. I stay with Canon because I believe the lens system is superior in quality and variety (as well as out-of-camera color).

However, I'm not sure that talking about an "ecosystem" is going to lure new shooters over. It sounds more like the camera isn't good enough to stand alone, so priority is placed on peripheral aspects.

I think ecosystem is important for people knowing they have a system which will be around in years to come and will grow with them.

I also think (uk only) that the average sales assistant would not be able to tell you any differences between sensors in the cameras they sell. I don't read uk magazines any more, so would be interested to know how many of them highlight the problem with read noise at low ISO.

It is funny, I remember with both the 5D and the 1ds trying to pull the exposure up and seeing the noise and concluding oops, sensor limitation. Only the internet and places like dpreview forums and then here, educated me better. Fortunately for Canon, their largest % of buyers do not research on the internet, or are not affected....
 
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jrista said:
Stu_bert said:
jrista said:
Famateur said:
jrista said:
@Famateur: Because of the fact that the sky was overcast, that dispersed a lot of the light, resulting a higher diffuse ambient level. The dynamic range of the scene was within the dynamic range of the sensor. A scene that was directly lit by the sun would actually have had higher dynamic range, and actually posed a greater problem for lifting the shadows.

Given the unprocessed version of your image, I would offer that you could have underexposed slightly more, and avoided the pinkish/purple toning that occurred when you recovered the highlights in the clouds. You might have had slightly more noise in the foreground, but I think that would ultimately be preferable to the color grading issues in the clouds.

Agreed on both points. :)

The first thing I noticed when I opened the file was that, despite the underexposure, I still managed to burn some of the sky. Hard to see on an LCD outside, but what can you do. With wife and kids anxious to move on, no time to fiddle with enabling highlight alert. I'll see if I can desaturate that patch of pinkish clouds with a local brush...

Aye, I understand. That is one of the areas where having more DR can be very useful. It has nothing to do with being a novice or not, knowing how to choose exposure or not. Sometimes the tools in our hands don't tell us everything. For example, JPEG thumbnails are usually used to generate the histogram shown on the camera, and to determine when to show "blinkies" that indicate blown highlights when previewing images. Use of JPEG results in highly inaccurate feedback. However, sometimes, when your on the run, with the family, wouldn't it be really nice to be able to dial in a darker exposure than you think you could probably get away with...and just not have to worry that doing so will affect your IQ?

Two additional stops of editing latitude would allow that. It's just one of the things it can allow for. I don't think it's an invalid reason because it helps you continue to create better photography when your in a rush. There can't really be any bad reasons for having better technology. At the same time, having an additional two stops of editing latitude means if that arch WAS directly and brightly lit by the sun...you could have still gotten a photo and been able to extract whatever amount of detail you wanted to from the shadows, without running into nasty color noise, banding, etc.



Based on the tone around here, I can only assume the following:

Just because you used a camera with a better sensor to get either shot, one with diffuse lighting vs. one with direct lighting, and were able to lift the shadows more, would likely get you labeled either as a total noob who doesn't know how to expose, or a poser who isn't a "real" photographer who takes on the challenge of creating a real work of art with limited equipment...

Seriously... ::)

Having better tech is useful, but is it always required?

Canon has to balance their investment and return across multiple lines within their camera business, and to be successful they're not always going to change at the pace we want. That they have the tech via patents but chose not yet to implement it means the business case does not stack up in terms of the cost of producing it vs the extra revenue it will bring.

Where I think you have to be careful Jrista is that you have stated that other than for astro photography, most of your shots are at higher ISO where Canon is not lagging behind. Your shots demonstrate that you can take good pictures. Yet you seem to have completely lost your rag with Canon (not anyone here) because they chose still not to implement their better tech.

Being passionate, voicing the need for change is fine. Appearing to suggest that Canon needs to adapt their ways or they will be the next dinosaur is somewhat out of character for you.

Will Canon be here in 10 years time? Not sure. The photography market is under threat because there is a high percentage of the population who are happy with the quality from their smartphones. That's hit revenues quite a bit, couple with a global recession. Many companies, including Canon, are being more cautious.

Smaller companies are always less risk adverse... They have less to lose, and everything to gain. Nikon chose to side with another company who had nothing to lose, Sony. And the competition is great as a result. Ditto mirror less. More choice is good. Will Nikon survive their decision better than Canon? I suspect Sony will buy them in a few years time as they struggle to adapt.

I'm just not convinced personally that there is sufficient gain by moving to Nikon or Sony. Your mileage may differ. A friend of mine sold his 5d mk iii and probably about 10k euros of lenses, retaining his 600mm and 7d. He swapped to Fuji, so it can be done....

Like I said, your contribution to explaining a lot of the tech here has been welcome. I would welcome improvements in Canon sensor, sure would.

First, I totally agree...I think at some point Sony will probably buy Nikon. There is obviously something wrong with Nikon's strategy. It isn't the technology...so it's something else. I myself see them as being schizophrenic, they make odd business decisions and seem to waste money on pointless things that are unlikely to recoup all the R&D costs, let alone make them money.

There are some out there who think that in a few years time, the only three players left in the ILC market will be Canon, Nikon and Sony, and possibly just Canon and Sony. The rest will either merge, fold, or enter the smartphone camera market in one way or another (kind of like Sony's QX line.) I don't know, I think more companies will ally with Sony in one way or another, use their sensors. Sony may scoop a couple of them up. In the end, there may well indeed end up being only three major players in the ILC market.

Just to be clear, I have no intention of "switching" brands. If I do anything, it will be adding another brand to my kit. There are still problems with that. I despise the fact that Sony chose a lossy "raw" format...it doesn't even qualify to be called RAW since it's lossy. I'd have an A7r already if not for that. I also have never lied about my opinion of Nikon ergonomics. So, it's not an ideal situation. However...for my landscape photography...which, how often have you seen me share landscapes? Rarely. :P I have never cared for the editing latitude of my Canon files at low ISO. Even with good NR, you still have to pick some balance between shadow detail and shadow noise. I'm quite good with Topaz DeNoise 5, it is a very effective program. But even that still eats detail for breakfast if you really push the NR far enough that Canon shadows look like Exmor shadows.

My high ISO photography is great, I'm happy with it. I have no doubt I still have years of learning left for birds and wildlife, my work doesn't even compare to the pros. However, my low ISO photography? I've never been satisfied with it. I have some decent shots, but, eh. I figured Canon would have had a high DR part out by now, so I didn't let it bother me. But now it seems Canon is content with what they have...for whatever reasons....and I'm not. I don't like fighting with noise in the shadows. I don't like having to obliterate detail to clean my landscape shadows up. I just don't like it...never have. I was patient, I waited. I'm tired of waiting. I wait so often, wait on people, companies, technology.

I am personally convinced that the D800 or D810 could improve my landscape photography. Over the last couple of years, I've seen too many incredible photos on 500px and 1x that demonstrated the incredible power of having two additional stops of DR/Editing Latitude. This one in particular is just mind blowing...I'd LOVE to see anyone try to replicate that with a 5D III. I'd honestly bet good money it's impossible:

http://500px.com/photo/74066923/if-2-by-zsolt-kiss

The sun is fully realized there...and the foreground detail is, quite detailed. I think that's an amazing shot. I've tried shooting into the sun before with my Canon cameras. I'm fully and well versed in ETTR, I know exactly how to use it. I've used GND filters. I've NEVER been able to actually do what this photographer did with a D800. That's a scene with tons of DR....from deep shadows behind the rock and mountain, to the sun itself (which isn't blown in any way that I can see.) As far as I can tell, that was an f/22, 1s ISO 100 shot. I would LOVE to be able to do that!

As much as we, all being Canon fans, want to defend the company...they are behind. And they are falling farther and farther behind. I'm not joking when I say that Canon sensor technology is archaic. It really, sadly, is. If the 7D II gets a minimal evolutionary update to the 70D sensor...then, just as sad, that fact remains true. That disappoints me.

JRista, it's a nice picture - irrespective of the body. I think if I was there, then I probably would have done an HDR, but when I get back home I will check and see if I have anything similar. I suspect if I do, then there will be less detail in the shadows, so I do appreciate where you are coming from.

I guess I have got used to filters and HDR, and perhaps become resigned to that fact. Anything which reduces the post processing effort is definitely worth it. I personally will wait till the 5d IV and 1dx mk ii are announced, as I think. Canon know they are not addressing landscape photographers completely. I think their focus was rightly on the bigger markets - wedding with the mk iii, and sports/nature with the 1dx and now the 7d mk ii. If in 2015 there's not some improvements then I may look again at an alternative body - hopefully one which I can retain my canon glass on... If I don't travel abroad then I tend to take nature and landscape kit (oops, 2 bags). Abroad just one bag, so mixing canon and another brand would limit my choices)....
 
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Aglet said:
Sporgon said:
These 5Ds must have been specially modified;

http://500px.com/photo/37646388/land-of-the-setting-sun-by-robert-bynum
http://500px.com/photo/37251814/cape-arago-orcas-by-robert-bynum
http://500px.com/photo/69529953/the-golden-triangle-by-sairam-sundaresan
http://500px.com/photo/73747351/walt-whitman-+-freedom-pier-by-darren-loprinzi
http://500px.com/photo/59451838/baladrar-by-pedro-josé-benlloch-nieto

the first 2 look like sharp line ND grads

Agree the 2nd one, in fact the Orca looks fake... Probably cause with a long exposure unless they weren't moving it would be blurred.

On the first one, had you used a grad, then they would have had to clean up the rocks, I could not see stepped tonal change in them...
 
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