K said:
The rumor of an announcement is a good thing...
Many interesting thoughts here. Thx for the post.
1)
I see the 6D2 being a full-frame 80D (in broad strokes): significant AF upgrade (more than 19 and less than 61/65 of the nicer rigs) + tilty-flippy + DPAF + single slot + 5-6 fps. However, 4K (and how croppy it might be), 1/8000 shutter, and better sync speed would appear to be the 'maybe not for this price point' sort of decisions.
2)
'Death blow to Nikon' is exceptionally premature -- don't let a chain of bad business decisions in other segments (APS-C compacts, CX sensored mirrorless, etc.) fool you into thinking they've forgotten how an SLR works. An update to all of the D610 / D750 / D810 are in the works and if the D500 is any indication, Nikon is not fooling around with how much tech they'll pack into a new rig. Backlit keys, massive buffers, oodles of AF points -- short of IBIS and strong video AF, it seems like everything will be packed into their future FF SLRs.
3) Re:
low buzz on the 5D4 vs. 5D3 -- largely, I agree, but now the 5D# line is a mature, it somewhat markets itself and I'd imagine sales are steady there. Also, Canon needs to put more energy into newer stuff that the 5D2 set into motion -- like folks making movies (Cinema EOS), enthusiasts stepping up to FF (6D line), etc. -- so it stands to reason that Canon's marketing focus is naturally more spread out given how many more lines of cameras they carry.
4) I am a broken record on the 7D3. Just because the D500 exists and Canon now has better on-chip ADC sensors does not mean a fast refresh 7D3 will happen. That's an forum-dweller engineering a christmas-comes-early outcome that walks against the grain of Canon being Canon:
nothing is ever refreshed faster than the cycle that came before it. The 7D3 will happen in 2019-ish timeframe unless 7D2 sales completely tank, and I've seen zero evidence to that effect.
- A