CustomizedMacs said:privatebydesign said:There are many good discussion points about such a purchase.
[list type=decimal]
[*]What do you shoot with now?
[*]Why do you want/need a 1DX?
[*]What do you think a 1DX MkII will have that the 1DX doesn't?
[*]Do you need/want these additional speculative features?
[/list]
If your current camera is letting you down, get the 1DX.
If you want it just because you want it, get the 1DX.
If you don't have a pretty good idea of what a MkII will have that you need over the 1DX, get the 1DX.
If a 1DX can do the job/satisfy the desire you have for a new camera, get the 1DX.
I want a 1DX, I even have the money set aside for one, but I don't need it, so I am in the slightly unusual position of making a conscious decision to wait and see what the MkII brings. Some of the many features I'd really like from the current camera are the medium iso performance, 800-3200 iso; the newer RT flash integration, the better screen, the multiple exposure function, the second joystick etc etc. I could get a couple of 5D MkIII's to get the MP I demand and use, but at this point I am happy to wait.
I want the best camera there is. I am a perfectionist and I always want the best of everything.
verysimplejason said:Who doesn't want a 1DX???If you can afford it and you've already got the lenses that you want, then buy it by all means. Also start exercising those biceps and neck. I tell you, you'll gonna need it.
Just because he does not know when a new upgrade will come out, he does not need it? :DArora said:+1RLPhoto said:If you have to ask, you don't need it.
ksagomonyants said:CustomizedMacs.com said:privatebydesign said:There are many good discussion points about such a purchase.
[list type=decimal]
[*]What do you shoot with now?
[*]Why do you want/need a 1DX?
[*]What do you think a 1DX MkII will have that the 1DX doesn't?
[*]Do you need/want these additional speculative features?
[/list]
If your current camera is letting you down, get the 1DX.
If you want it just because you want it, get the 1DX.
If you don't have a pretty good idea of what a MkII will have that you need over the 1DX, get the 1DX.
If a 1DX can do the job/satisfy the desire you have for a new camera, get the 1DX.
I want a 1DX, I even have the money set aside for one, but I don't need it, so I am in the slightly unusual position of making a conscious decision to wait and see what the MkII brings. Some of the many features I'd really like from the current camera are the medium iso performance, 800-3200 iso; the newer RT flash integration, the better screen, the multiple exposure function, the second joystick etc etc. I could get a couple of 5D MkIII's to get the MP I demand and use, but at this point I am happy to wait.
I want the best camera there is. I am a perfectionist and I always want the best of everything.
I read an article that compared the 1DX to the model that is slightly cheaper that it, and it said that the only better thing about the cheaper camera was more MPX. Other than that one point, the 1DX was obviously superior in every single way.
As for the "1DX MkII", is it mistyped? I see no "1DX MkII." I guess you just mistyped it.
Correct me if I'm wrong but I thought that a perfectionist doesn't have to have the best gear but instead can achieve the best out of what he has. So, what do you have right now and what're you trying to achieve with 1dx? But if you're trying to get the best, maybe you should look at 1dc instead of 1dx?
privatebydesign said:RGF said:neuroanatomist said:Buy. Or wait...the update to the 1D X should be along in 2-3 years.
Why do say that? Seriously I would like to understand your logic. FOr example the 1Dx is about a year old and based upon history the 1Ds was updated every 3-4 years. Is that correct?
The 1DX is 18 months old, no other 1D has gone more than 36 months apart from the 1Ds MkIII, and the 1DX is NOT a 1Ds MkIII replacement. This gives the 1DX a historical replacement cycle of within the next 18 months.
privatebydesign said:There was a very good reason Canon and Nikon made two very distinct "pro" bodies, one very much orientated to sports and general shooters, the other orientated towards studio and landscape. Now the D800 has proven that much higher mp can be used effectively by the best glass, you don't replace a 21mp camera with an 18mp camera when your competitor just went from 24mp to 36mp. Even if the high mp Canon is not a 1 series, it doesn't alter the point that the 1DX is looked on as a "sports/general purpose" camera and these tools have typically had a less than three year lifespan.
pensive tomato said:Well, not necessarily. Sure, if the OP wants the current Canon flagship camera, then get the 1D X. As others have pointed out, a mkII replacement is not in the horizon judging by previous product cycles; although the mythical high MP 1D body may be announced within a year (nothing but rumors).
Nonetheless, two other considerations come to mind when buying a new camera, OP:
1) What do you shoot currently? What uses do you envision for your new camera?
2) What lenses do you have? Do you have more pressing needs on that front?
Even if the OP has all the money in the world, I get the impression that he/she is looking to make an informed decision.
neuroanatomist said:privatebydesign said:RGF said:neuroanatomist said:Buy. Or wait...the update to the 1D X should be along in 2-3 years.
Why do say that? Seriously I would like to understand your logic. FOr example the 1Dx is about a year old and based upon history the 1Ds was updated every 3-4 years. Is that correct?
The 1DX is 18 months old, no other 1D has gone more than 36 months apart from the 1Ds MkIII, and the 1DX is NOT a 1Ds MkIII replacement. This gives the 1DX a historical replacement cycle of within the next 18 months.
Maybe. Canon could have totally lied when they stated that the 1Ds and 1D lines were being merged in the 1D X. But they stated that - explicitly.
privatebydesign said:There was a very good reason Canon and Nikon made two very distinct "pro" bodies, one very much orientated to sports and general shooters, the other orientated towards studio and landscape. Now the D800 has proven that much higher mp can be used effectively by the best glass, you don't replace a 21mp camera with an 18mp camera when your competitor just went from 24mp to 36mp. Even if the high mp Canon is not a 1 series, it doesn't alter the point that the 1DX is looked on as a "sports/general purpose" camera and these tools have typically had a less than three year lifespan.
Exactly. The hypothetical Canon high MP body might be an EOS 3D (or whataver), a non-1-series body. Also, you seem to be starting your clock from the announcement of the 1D X, not it's actual release. The length of time from announcement to release for the high end stuff seems to be growing, not shrinking. So even if the replacement is announced 32 months after the last announcement, the real availability might be 3.5 years or more.
I guess we'll just have to wait and see. I do think that Canon is putting less emphasis on the 1-series - they're making a great camera, but the consolidation of the two sub-lines is an acknowledgment that while the flagship is important, it's not a major contributor to their dSLR revenue.