Canon Rumors said:$899USD body only for the EOS 77D, $1049 w/18-55 f/4-5.6 IS STM, $1499 w/18-135 IS STM.
Nininini said:Don't really care if a camera has 45 or 19 AF points. For slow moving or static objects, I almost always use the center AF point, half press the shutter and recompose, or I move the AF point manually.
(I have heard some people argue that recomposing can actually cause a miss-focus due the recompose, I have not noticed that, maybe because I don't have any 1.2 or 1.4 lenses, but for me recompose works every time)
When I shoot our birds, I just don't trust AF, I know where they will be and prefocus on the ground at a distance I know the bird will be at, I turn off AF, and then point the camera to the sky, I know the width of my DoF (I'll be using at least f/5.6 or f/8.0), and I'll burst shoot and I'll get several shots perfectly in focus.
For all the commercials about cameras being able to focus on fast moving subjects, I still don't trust it and don't use it. It's not fast enough and not precise enough, if there's a cloud or tree or anything else in the frame it will miss focus, the camera has no idea that I want to focus on the bird, especially not when it doesn't take up much room in the frame, it will focus on the sky, or cloud, or tree, etc. People say that you can use AF tracking by marking a target with the AF point, I don't know what birds people shoot that allows them to use tracking, but I don't find the time to do this, you can barely see the AF markings on most Canon cameras I tried, let alone do it while looking at a bright sky.
Maybe it's because I'm used to rebel cameras, but the chance that I nail a shot on a fast moving subject by relying on the AF is much smaller than prefocus and creating a large enough DoF. Maybe it works for birds flying high in the sky, but for a fast flying bird a few meters above you, it does not work for me, only prefocus works.
I know people shooting cyclists use this prefocus on the ground trick too. It's the only thing that I trust.
Nininini said:arcer said:TexPhoto said:Oh Gee, Should i sell my seven-ty dee? or my Seven dee to buy this seven-ty seven dee? Or just own three?
We got the EOS 7D, then the 70D, and now the 77D. What's next?
Maybe after 1-2 years later when we get the 90D, we can expect a little sister called 88D.
Or we might get a 8D first?
Say no to camera inbreeding.
ahsanford said:Nininini said:(I have heard some people argue that recomposing can actually cause a miss-focus due the recompose, I have not noticed that, maybe because I don't have any 1.2 or 1.4 lenses, but for me recompose works every time)
[Focus and recompose] + [fast glass shot wide open] + [relatively close subject (not macro, but say 5 feet on a standard prime)] is a great way to mis-focus and get a blurry shot. I never experienced that phenomenon myself until I slapped I starting using f/1.4 primes on my 5D3, and that makes sense: the smaller your DOF, the more reframing after focusing will hurt you.
- A
ronaldbyram said:In seeing these new camera's that Canon is releasing. its making my head hurt trying to figure out the branding Tree structure. Has anyone got a flow chart on what camera falls where?
I have a 60D and a 70D and then a 7D Mk II. I guess the T7I is the Rebel line and the 77D is it a 80D little brother?
I think the solid and dotted arrows from the 50D should swap places. Even though name-wise the 60D is the successor, handling-wise the 7D is closer to the 50D than the 60D is.Sharlin said:ronaldbyram said:In seeing these new camera's that Canon is releasing. its making my head hurt trying to figure out the branding Tree structure. Has anyone got a flow chart on what camera falls where?
I have a 60D and a 70D and then a 7D Mk II. I guess the T7I is the Rebel line and the 77D is it a 80D little brother?
Here you go! (Sorry for not including the D30, technical difficulties)
slclick said:midluk said:You know the difference between 0.5 Mg (megagram, also known as metric ton) and 0.5 mg (milligram)?Josh Denver said:Resisting the urge to get into the troll Mirror vs Mirrorless war. Hmmmm. Two xanax 0.5Mg. Hmmm. Done.
I think they meant they have enough to share, we all know we need it with this group.
rbielefeld said:(I have heard some people argue that recomposing can actually cause a miss-focus due the recompose, I have not noticed that, maybe because I don't have any 1.2 or 1.4 lenses, but for me recompose works every time)
EOS 80D with 18-135mm USM lens is currently selling for 1499$ vs 77D with 18-135mm STM lens for 1499$.slclick said:Canon Rumors said:$899USD body only for the EOS 77D, $1049 w/18-55 f/4-5.6 IS STM, $1499 w/18-135 IS STM.
Thanks! So it's roughly a $200 difference when compared to the 80D. I think it fills a gap in feature sets and price points quite nicely.
drmikeinpdx said:rbielefel: Those may be the best bird photos I've seen, you do have a gift for shooting our feathered friends!
However, I believe you use a 1DXII, which is going to have (one would hope) much better autofocus performance than the Rebel class bodies we are discussing in this thread.
So, has anyone found a trick for getting outstanding autofocus performance from Rebel bodies? My latest is a T5i and I don't find the autofocus to be very impressive.
scyrene said:rbielefeld said:(I have heard some people argue that recomposing can actually cause a miss-focus due the recompose, I have not noticed that, maybe because I don't have any 1.2 or 1.4 lenses, but for me recompose works every time)
These are stunning shots, but it's rather easy to say 'keep the AF point on the bird' and rather harder in practice. *Especially* with a fairly near foreground (i.e. anything but the sky), the camera much prefers to focus on the background, and keeping faster/more erratic birds under the active AF point can be very difficult indeed, especially with super-tele lenses.
AvTvM said:well, if we can [almost] have self-driving cars, I don't think it would be asking too much, if after all these years [all] mirrorslappers came with an AF system that can autonomously track a bird in flight and deliver 100% sharp images - at last against empty sky and as long as user manages to keep bird in frame, anywhere in frame that is. Having to keep a tiny, single AF point on a fast and erratically moving target is asking a hell of a lot. Especially when camera boasts having 449, 100 or 500 AF points and 20+ different AF setup paramteres ... rather poor and annoying. Definitely NOT a good tool by *my 2017 standards*. In effect, most promising AF-workflow is still pretty much as it was 25 years ago with film SLRs.
rbielefeld said:AvTvM said:well, if we can [almost] have self-driving cars, I don't think it would be asking too much, if after all these years [all] mirrorslappers came with an AF system that can autonomously track a bird in flight and deliver 100% sharp images - at last against empty sky and as long as user manages to keep bird in frame, anywhere in frame that is. Having to keep a tiny, single AF point on a fast and erratically moving target is asking a hell of a lot. Especially when camera boasts having 449, 100 or 500 AF points and 20+ different AF setup paramteres ... rather poor and annoying. Definitely NOT a good tool by *my 2017 standards*. In effect, most promising AF-workflow is still pretty much as it was 25 years ago with film SLRs.
I will respectfully disagree. Why? Because, I like the challenge. When cameras come along, and they will, that can do what you state, I will be not nearly as interested in photographing birds in flight or any tough to capture subject. I like striving to succeed at something that is difficult. It is so much more rewarding when you get good at it and start getting great images on a consistent basis. When cameras get so good that virtually anyone and everyone can get "the shot" it will no longer be photography for mel It will be just shooting pictures.
Chaitanya said:EOS 80D with 18-135mm USM lens is currently selling for 1499$ vs 77D with 18-135mm STM lens for 1499$.slclick said:Canon Rumors said:$899USD body only for the EOS 77D, $1049 w/18-55 f/4-5.6 IS STM, $1499 w/18-135 IS STM.
Thanks! So it's roughly a $200 difference when compared to the 80D. I think it fills a gap in feature sets and price points quite nicely.
This kit doesnt make sense at all, when the pricing was for this kit Canon marketing team was surely high on drugs.