George D. said:If Nikon is using Sony sensors I doubt Canon will ever do the same. It's a matter of differentiation.
Nikon and Canon can both use Sony sensors - just not the same sensor.
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George D. said:If Nikon is using Sony sensors I doubt Canon will ever do the same. It's a matter of differentiation.
sigh said:I think people are forgetting one of the main benefits of Canon not using Sony sensors, especially for videographers, namely DPAF. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I understood sensors had to be manufactured in a certain way for DPAF to work. Sony sensors aren't manufactured with this feature and can't be unless Canon licence their patents to them. This is never going to happen.
Personally I'd be against Canon using a third party sensor, like the Sony, if it meant losing DPAF.
dilbert said:jasny said:sigh said:I think people are forgetting one of the main benefits of Canon not using Sony sensors, especially for videographers, namely DPAF. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I understood sensors had to be manufactured in a certain way for DPAF to work. Sony sensors aren't manufactured with this feature and can't be unless Canon licence their patents to them. This is never going to happen.
Personally I'd be against Canon using a third party sensor, like the Sony, if it meant losing DPAF.
DPAF is more than 2 years on the market, but we still even don't know if Canon plans to use it on FF sensors at all...
The C100, C300 and C300 MkII have DPAF.
IIRC, STM is a complimentary technology to DPAF. So why did Canon start making full frame STM lenses like the 24-105 IS STM?jasny said:dilbert said:jasny said:sigh said:I think people are forgetting one of the main benefits of Canon not using Sony sensors, especially for videographers, namely DPAF. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I understood sensors had to be manufactured in a certain way for DPAF to work. Sony sensors aren't manufactured with this feature and can't be unless Canon licence their patents to them. This is never going to happen.
Personally I'd be against Canon using a third party sensor, like the Sony, if it meant losing DPAF.
DPAF is more than 2 years on the market, but we still even don't know if Canon plans to use it on FF sensors at all...
The C100, C300 and C300 MkII have DPAF.
Those are low Mpix Super-35 sensors for video, not high Mpix FF sensors for stills...
StudentOfLight said:IIRC, STM is a complimentary technology to DPAF. So why did Canon start making full frame STM lenses like the 24-105 IS STM?jasny said:dilbert said:jasny said:sigh said:I think people are forgetting one of the main benefits of Canon not using Sony sensors, especially for videographers, namely DPAF. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I understood sensors had to be manufactured in a certain way for DPAF to work. Sony sensors aren't manufactured with this feature and can't be unless Canon licence their patents to them. This is never going to happen.
Personally I'd be against Canon using a third party sensor, like the Sony, if it meant losing DPAF.
DPAF is more than 2 years on the market, but we still even don't know if Canon plans to use it on FF sensors at all...
The C100, C300 and C300 MkII have DPAF.
Those are low Mpix Super-35 sensors for video, not high Mpix FF sensors for stills...
Canon doesn't release full frame bodies every couple of months. The 6D was probably too late in it's development to include DPAF. Since then, the only new full frame is the 5Ds/R line, which Canon decided was not gonna be video oriented (no headphone-jack, no clean HDMI-out)jasny said:StudentOfLight said:IIRC, STM is a complimentary technology to DPAF. So why did Canon start making full frame STM lenses like the 24-105 IS STM?jasny said:dilbert said:jasny said:sigh said:I think people are forgetting one of the main benefits of Canon not using Sony sensors, especially for videographers, namely DPAF. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I understood sensors had to be manufactured in a certain way for DPAF to work. Sony sensors aren't manufactured with this feature and can't be unless Canon licence their patents to them. This is never going to happen.
Personally I'd be against Canon using a third party sensor, like the Sony, if it meant losing DPAF.
DPAF is more than 2 years on the market, but we still even don't know if Canon plans to use it on FF sensors at all...
The C100, C300 and C300 MkII have DPAF.
Those are low Mpix Super-35 sensors for video, not high Mpix FF sensors for stills...
And 40/2.8 is either STM for FF. And available almost for 3 years... And still no DPAF FF...
BTW: I use my STM lenses without DPAF and I'm quite happy with them![]()
Agreed!StudentOfLight said:Canon doesn't release full frame bodies every couple of months. The 6D was probably too late in it's development to include DPAF. Since then, the only new full frame is the 5Ds/R line, which Canon decided was not gonna be video oriented (no headphone-jack, no clean HDMI-out)jasny said:StudentOfLight said:IIRC, STM is a complimentary technology to DPAF. So why did Canon start making full frame STM lenses like the 24-105 IS STM?jasny said:dilbert said:jasny said:sigh said:I think people are forgetting one of the main benefits of Canon not using Sony sensors, especially for videographers, namely DPAF. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I understood sensors had to be manufactured in a certain way for DPAF to work. Sony sensors aren't manufactured with this feature and can't be unless Canon licence their patents to them. This is never going to happen.
Personally I'd be against Canon using a third party sensor, like the Sony, if it meant losing DPAF.
DPAF is more than 2 years on the market, but we still even don't know if Canon plans to use it on FF sensors at all...
The C100, C300 and C300 MkII have DPAF.
Those are low Mpix Super-35 sensors for video, not high Mpix FF sensors for stills...
And 40/2.8 is either STM for FF. And available almost for 3 years... And still no DPAF FF...
BTW: I use my STM lenses without DPAF and I'm quite happy with them![]()
I wonder what the real turn around time is for Canon to go from concept to production models shipping? Probably differs depending on how drastic the new model deviates from the previous model, such as the 5D3 vs 5Ds.Don Haines said:Agreed!StudentOfLight said:Canon doesn't release full frame bodies every couple of months. The 6D was probably too late in it's development to include DPAF. Since then, the only new full frame is the 5Ds/R line, which Canon decided was not gonna be video oriented (no headphone-jack, no clean HDMI-out)jasny said:StudentOfLight said:IIRC, STM is a complimentary technology to DPAF. So why did Canon start making full frame STM lenses like the 24-105 IS STM?jasny said:dilbert said:jasny said:sigh said:I think people are forgetting one of the main benefits of Canon not using Sony sensors, especially for videographers, namely DPAF. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I understood sensors had to be manufactured in a certain way for DPAF to work. Sony sensors aren't manufactured with this feature and can't be unless Canon licence their patents to them. This is never going to happen.
Personally I'd be against Canon using a third party sensor, like the Sony, if it meant losing DPAF.
DPAF is more than 2 years on the market, but we still even don't know if Canon plans to use it on FF sensors at all...
The C100, C300 and C300 MkII have DPAF.
Those are low Mpix Super-35 sensors for video, not high Mpix FF sensors for stills...
And 40/2.8 is either STM for FF. And available almost for 3 years... And still no DPAF FF...
BTW: I use my STM lenses without DPAF and I'm quite happy with them![]()
We are talking about LONG development cycles on Camera bodies.... The 5D4 project probably started before the 5D3 was released....