merefield said:The main thing I want to see is:
100% viewfinder!
I hate cropped viewfinders, you can waste so many pixels and have to crop which is a real pain in the workflow. I want to be able to compose accurately through the viewfinder, and would like NOT to have to revisit: the lack of a 100% viewfinder has nearly spoiled a number of my 'tight' shots and wasted a lot of time.
No 100% viewfinder? I won't be upgrading.
Etienne said:I am actually considering the Tokina 14-20 f/2 for both FF and Crop. At 20mm it is a full-frame f/2 prime, for dirt cheap. How can you beat that?
Luds34 said:merefield said:The main thing I want to see is:
100% viewfinder!
I hate cropped viewfinders, you can waste so many pixels and have to crop which is a real pain in the workflow. I want to be able to compose accurately through the viewfinder, and would like NOT to have to revisit: the lack of a 100% viewfinder has nearly spoiled a number of my 'tight' shots and wasted a lot of time.
No 100% viewfinder? I won't be upgrading.
Huh, is it that bad on the current 6D? I'll have to look it up now. I guess I've never been too upset that I've ended up getting a bit more in my picture then what I saw through the viewfinder. Worse case if it captures a tiny bit of something I didn't want/expect, a tiny crop in post fixes the issue.
Mikehit said:Etienne said:The Tokina lenses are EF mount NOT EF-S.
They are made for APS-C sized sensors, but at the long end of the zoom they cover FF sensor, so people with FF cameras also use them on those cameras.
The EF-S mount itself offers no significant advantage.
I stand corrected (I should have known that as I have tried out a couple of Tokina lenses!)
I still fail to see why you would want to put on a FF body a third party lens that you can only use over part of the range. It just seems a very odd shaped stick with which to beat Canon.
Mikehit said:Etienne said:They did this because they designed EF-S lenses to protrude too far into the camera body.
And they did that to enable them to make smaller lenses and take full advantage of the fact that they needed to project a smaller image circle. In fact, APS-C is hobbled by its original need to mount EF lenses, back in the day there were no decent EF-S lenses and the mount had to be big enough to take EF lenses.
So actually you have the history the wrong way round.
FECHariot said:Etienne said:I am actually considering the Tokina 14-20 f/2 for both FF and Crop. At 20mm it is a full-frame f/2 prime, for dirt cheap. How can you beat that?
The Sigma 20/1.4 Art is a stop faster and is made to cover the FF sensor. Plus even though the crop Tokinas will cover the FF size at the long end of the zoom, sharpness really falls off a cliff in those corners. Plus the Sigma has a proper AF motor with full time override instead of that ancient clutch micro motor drive crap from Tokina. Unless you need filters and don't want to adapt a Lee filter system to the bulbous Sigma, I see little reason to go with the Tokina there.
Etienne said:Mikehit said:Etienne said:They did this because they designed EF-S lenses to protrude too far into the camera body.
And they did that to enable them to make smaller lenses and take full advantage of the fact that they needed to project a smaller image circle. In fact, APS-C is hobbled by its original need to mount EF lenses, back in the day there were no decent EF-S lenses and the mount had to be big enough to take EF lenses.
So actually you have the history the wrong way round.
The EF-S lenses are not smaller for the same function. I owned the EF-S 18-55 f/2.8 IS and the EF 24-105 f/4L IS. The 24-105 performed better on the 5D than the 18-55 did on the 40D in every respect. I never saw any APS-C size or weight advantage once you attached a similarly performing lens.
My meaning was that the design intention of EF-S required the lens to protrude into the body.
Any way ... there's no advantage to the EF-S lenses, and plenty of disadvantages, as noted wrt the Tokina wide zooms.
Sarpedon said:scyrene said:Sarpedon said:I've been lurking around this forum for a long, long time, waiting for news, learning new things and admiring people's pictures.
So I just wanted to log in for once and say that the endless, nasty threads like this are why I don't participate. Someone posts a hyperbolic complaint, someone chimes in to say that person is a moron, and on and on it goes for pages. It's really awful.
It's a shame you're put off. I'm afraid that's how internet forums are though...
...should posts that are demonstrably untrue be left unchallenged? ... Is it better to be unfailingly polite whilst letting wrongheadedness prevail? ...
...It's the tone and content of those responses I object to. There's just no need to insult people when you're disabusing them of a misconception, there's no need to be curt and condescending...if the newbies come in screaming at people and calling them names they should be warned and then banned if they keep at it. I also think that there are some people in this forum - some of the more prolific posters - who either get off on condescending to other people or who can't control their own anger because they've had these arguments so many times. And, frankly, I think the moderators could do a better job.
...the newbies and a few of the folks who post constantly are ruining it.
Etienne said:FECHariot said:Etienne said:I am actually considering the Tokina 14-20 f/2 for both FF and Crop. At 20mm it is a full-frame f/2 prime, for dirt cheap. How can you beat that?
The Sigma 20/1.4 Art is a stop faster and is made to cover the FF sensor. Plus even though the crop Tokinas will cover the FF size at the long end of the zoom, sharpness really falls off a cliff in those corners. Plus the Sigma has a proper AF motor with full time override instead of that ancient clutch micro motor drive crap from Tokina. Unless you need filters and don't want to adapt a Lee filter system to the bulbous Sigma, I see little reason to go with the Tokina there.
It may not be the lens to choose if your primary purpose is 20mm on FF, but it's a free bonus. And it does a great job for wide zoom on APS-C, it's primary purpose, which just happens to be exactly what you need for 4K on the 5D4.
So, one lens on the 5D4 gives 20mm f/2 prime FF performance, and 22-32 mm f/2 zoom for 4K video. Can't do that with the Sigma
scyrene said:Etienne said:Mikehit said:Etienne said:They did this because they designed EF-S lenses to protrude too far into the camera body.
And they did that to enable them to make smaller lenses and take full advantage of the fact that they needed to project a smaller image circle. In fact, APS-C is hobbled by its original need to mount EF lenses, back in the day there were no decent EF-S lenses and the mount had to be big enough to take EF lenses.
So actually you have the history the wrong way round.
The EF-S lenses are not smaller for the same function. I owned the EF-S 18-55 f/2.8 IS and the EF 24-105 f/4L IS. The 24-105 performed better on the 5D than the 18-55 did on the 40D in every respect. I never saw any APS-C size or weight advantage once you attached a similarly performing lens.
My meaning was that the design intention of EF-S required the lens to protrude into the body.
Any way ... there's no advantage to the EF-S lenses, and plenty of disadvantages, as noted wrt the Tokina wide zooms.
Price?
Etienne said:scyrene said:Etienne said:Mikehit said:Etienne said:They did this because they designed EF-S lenses to protrude too far into the camera body.
And they did that to enable them to make smaller lenses and take full advantage of the fact that they needed to project a smaller image circle. In fact, APS-C is hobbled by its original need to mount EF lenses, back in the day there were no decent EF-S lenses and the mount had to be big enough to take EF lenses.
So actually you have the history the wrong way round.
The EF-S lenses are not smaller for the same function. I owned the EF-S 18-55 f/2.8 IS and the EF 24-105 f/4L IS. The 24-105 performed better on the 5D than the 18-55 did on the 40D in every respect. I never saw any APS-C size or weight advantage once you attached a similarly performing lens.
My meaning was that the design intention of EF-S required the lens to protrude into the body.
Any way ... there's no advantage to the EF-S lenses, and plenty of disadvantages, as noted wrt the Tokina wide zooms.
Price?
Not for lenses in my experience. The closest two comparable lenses are the EF-S 18-55 f/2.8 IS and the original 24-105 f/4L IS. They were around the same price when I had them both, but the 24-105 was better in every way.
scyrene said:Oh right. Well, better in every way except it's a stop wider. It definitely beats the 24-105 at f/2.8!![]()
Mikehit said:douglaurent said:That's the whole point, without some positive surprise and logical acting by Canon it would take until the next decade until they offer features that many already consider basics for their work.
The best thing would be if Canon NEVER does release a camera with mirror again, as it hardly makes sense anymore. They should simply start by releasing mirrorless versions of the 5D4 and 1DX2, with - most important - the same old mount and no stupid new mount! This is something Canon could release next year, and they would be everyone's darling again.
Is mirrorless really 'basic for your work' or just that you like the way it works?
How many times does this need repeating before you understand it instead of merely repeating what you have already said. Every manufacturer has a target market and Canon's key market is action, sports and wildlife.Pperformance of mirrorless autofocus systems is not yet as good as DSLRs and Canon will turn 1DX and 5D into mirrorless cameras as and when they have mirrorless AF technology to match that of DSLRs.
No amount of wishful bleating by your or anyone else will change that.
scyrene said:douglaurent said:Personally I don't even complain about the prices, and would pay $1000 more if a 5D4 had an articulating screen. I would pay lots more if it was mirrorless. They just need to release it.
Simple question: do you think Canon would gain more customers than it loses if they charged $1000 more having released the 5D4 as a mirrorless camera? Take a step back, calm down, and *think*. One of the biggest complaints on these forums and elsewhere has been the 5D4's high introductory price. I've seen no complaints about the presence of a mirror. Do you think there's such a huge unspoken groundswell of desire for a mirrorless equivalent that all those people would pay that much more for it?
Or can you actually see that your needs are not mainstream? That doesn't make them wrong. But releasing a camera that doesn't sell well because *most* people don't want to pay that much for what it is would be a poor business decision. Can you see that?
Memdroid said:Wow... Dougs requests borders on ridiculous.. Why someone want to put a crop lens on a FF body is beyond me.
Sator said:douglaurent said:The best thing would be if Canon NEVER does release a camera with mirror again, as it hardly makes sense anymore. They should simply start by releasing mirrorless versions of the 5D4 and 1DX2, with - most important - the same old mount and no stupid new mount! This is something Canon could release next year, and they would be everyone's darling again.
This must be the dumbest statement I've read in a long time.
People seem to think that the mirror on a DSLR is some sort of fashion accessory about as photographically useful as a vanity mirror. If you've been using it to put on makeup all this time...it's time someone pulled you aside to tell you it actually serves an important function. It feeds light to a dedicated off-focal plane PDAF sensor.
Mirrorless cameras should really be more honestly called AF-sensorless cameras because they have had this dedicated PDAF sensor ripped out of them. It is the height of foolishness to expect a camera to function as well without that extra AF-sensor.
Now, you can argue for the benefits of a fixed semi-translucent pellicle mirror of a kind Canon pioneered a long time ago, as a means of eliminating mirror shock, but to suggest that the mirror and the dedicated PDAF sensor are just pointless fashion accessories is abject ignorance. The bigger the rant and the more sweeping the certainty of the soapbox opinion, the more you can assured it is based on gross misinformation.
dilbert said:But the problem for others is that if it is indeed isn't the same person again and again then the increasing number of new people upset with Canon upsets their mindset regarding Canon. Since various people want to believe the Sun effectively shines out of Canon's a*** then it is easier to think of a growing number of people that are discontent with Canon to be the one person than accept that multiple people may be disappointed with Canon's products.
dilbert said:d said:...
The opinion is held that many of the "newbies" here are likely repeat members reposting under new user names in order to antagonise other members or promote their preferred, alternative branded cameras. The more suspicious might suggest some of them are paid by other camera companies to do so.
...
That is almost ridiculous. Think about it. Because a new poster arrives and posts something that someone who has been here longer doesn't like, it is a new avatar of someone else. Talk about paranoid.
dilbert said:But the problem for others is that if it is indeed isn't the same person again and again then the increasing number of new people upset with Canon upsets their mindset regarding Canon. Since various people want to believe the Sun effectively shines out of Canon's a*** then it is easier to think of a growing number of people that are discontent with Canon to be the one person than accept that multiple people may be disappointed with Canon's products.