Canon EOS 7D Mark II Rumors Surface [CR1]

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sagittariansrock said:
This is what will get my check book out:
1. Low noise at low ISO, high ISO capable sensor

It will be still a low-pro sport/wild camera where shutter speed fights against noise at high iso setting with rather not too fast lens on it. Low noise low iso is not so important as high iso capable sensor.

sagittariansrock said:
2. Same or higher frame rate
3. Same or higher MP- but only if point 1 is satisfied

OK

sagittariansrock said:
4. Two CF card slots

Not neccesserely.

sagittariansrock said:
5. Same or better AF (5DIII level?)
6. Same or better build quality

Agree.

sagittariansrock said:
This is not too much to ask, and given the rumors of a brand new sensor and the 46MP FF, I am guessing they are more than expected.
Besides, it is Canon's fault that I am asking for all this to upgrade- it is they who built the awesome 7D!
I am guessing Canon will also include Wi-fi, maybe even GPS, and some other doo-dads in order to lure unsure buyers, curb perpetual whiners (why didn't they add this if they have it in 6D), and increase the MSRP- but I don't care about those.

... and even more not so important stuff included.

I also think it will have the new AF system making benefit from new lenses and even newer ones like 300 f/4 L IS Mk2 and hopefuly other new not expensive teles.
 
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Canon Rumors said:
I think we’ll see the APS-C market slow down a bit, now that the D600 and EOS 6D are changing the pricing structure for consumer camera bodies.

This is a puzzling thought. It suggests a consumer who wants to try a DSLR first buys into a Rebel under $1K, and then when he wants to be better, he has two choices:

1. Get a 7D2 at over $2K. There is nothing (xxD) in between, and the 7D2 may be all wrong for him given its intended purposes.

2. Go FF with a 6D at over $2K.

I suppose a third option is a 7D2 AND a FF camera.

Seems to me that leaves a HUGE soft spot between $1K and $2K.

Surely something else is going on.
 
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What I'm reading here is either total speculation or wish-list mutterings. The reality is we have virtually no idea what Canon is likely to dish up, save that it will be an improvement over the 7D.

So I'll delve into the wish-list zone too with a hope that the 7DII ships with features that recognise the hole left by the discontinued APS-H 1D4. Action shooters appreciate the extra reach be it x1.3 or x1.6, and in a FF world may be faced with the expensive proposition of new, longer lenses to compensate. It shouldn't be too hard to deliver 1D4 levels of iso performance from an 18Mp sensor.

Despite what ignorant pictures of doom and negativity the chronic knockers and trolls try to paint here at CR, what I see is Canon releasing and developing some pretty extraordinary cameras and lenses, right through from P&S to DSLR to the newer Cinema range. I'm loving it.

-PW
 
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Canon-F1 said:
oh great so the 7D Mk2 will have the 60D autofocus (all 11 cross type of course) a full plastic body, 3" touch and swivel screen, wifi for facebook uploads, GPS, 1/160s sync speed and a 93% viewfinder.

the 20.1 MP sensor will have the decreased DR and noise performance we know from the 650D.

http://www.canonrumors.com/forum/index.php?topic=9994.0

but it will have a slow hybrid AF.. yipeeehhh.



only one SD card slot, but a popup flash.

and for a mere 1799$ it is yours......

Either that or they will just stick a crop sensor into the 6D body.
 
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pierceography said:
DB said:
If Canon do that and price it at $2k then I'll sell my 7D and buy a 7D2, in other words; I'd pay another 500 for those upgrades.

Agreed. But if the camera is over the $2,000 mark, there had better be some REALLY nice features to justify the price to upgrade. And I'm not talking about GPS, articulating screen, or touch screen. In fact, I'd pay money NOT to have the last two "features" on a prosumer SLR.

Why do you hate an articulating screen? That's one thing I can't understand. The articulating screen increases your creativity if you know how to use it. As long as canon can maintain the durability and weather proofing of the camera, articulating screen is great. At least it's there when you need it.
 
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verysimplejason said:
pierceography said:
DB said:
If Canon do that and price it at $2k then I'll sell my 7D and buy a 7D2, in other words; I'd pay another 500 for those upgrades.

Agreed. But if the camera is over the $2,000 mark, there had better be some REALLY nice features to justify the price to upgrade. And I'm not talking about GPS, articulating screen, or touch screen. In fact, I'd pay money NOT to have the last two "features" on a prosumer SLR.

Why do you hate an articulating screen? That's one thing I can't understand. The articulating screen increases your creativity if you know how to use it. As long as canon can maintain the durability and weather proofing of the camera, articulating screen is great. At least it's there when you need it.

Whatever about an articulated screen enabling more creativity, wireless liveview remote will be even more creative - you can place the DSLR on the ground (in long grass) where the tilty-swively-flippy screen is useless, have the lens protrude (e.g. bird or wildlife shots) and still have full control + instant playback of images + not be near the camera to scare off subjects.

Whatever you can do with a vari-angle screen you can do more with a portable screen that fits in your pocket. Articulated screens were a fad - a short-lived fad at that too (just a couple of rebels + 60D)
 
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marekjoz said:
I'm afraid it will have a lot of more or less useful features but not much better IQ.
We should expect 2 digics, android & ios support, gps, radio remote flash, touchscreen, built-in flash, 3-6 MP more and 1/4 - 1/2 stop better ISO performance with the same DR. AF better than 5d3, maybe even better than 1dx. It could also be strong in video as 1dx. Looking at similarities between 1dx and 1dc, maybe this time the "C" brother of this new 7d2 could be some high fps video camera (1920p @60, 720p @120)?
Priced at 2499$-2999$ depending on video features.

If the above existed for $2,500, it would sell. No question about it, as a 2nd body for Pro/Enthusiasts and as a video DSLR for those who want 1920x1080x60 with All-I
 
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I've been waiting to upgrade from my T1i, and was hoping to wait for a 60D successor. I found the T1i simply too small, especially after acquiring my telephoto lens.

This should be interesting, because if they merge the two in the upwards direction there will be a sizeable gap between the T4i-series models.

Hopefully the new sensor beings some improvements.
 
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ag25 said:
I've been waiting to upgrade from my T1i, and was hoping to wait for a 60D successor. I found the T1i simply too small, especially after acquiring my telephoto lens.

This should be interesting, because if they merge the two in the upwards direction there will be a sizeable gap between the T4i-series models.

Hopefully the new sensor beings some improvements.

Hah. Exactly like me. I am seriously wanting to upgrade my T1i and a 70D would definitely hit the spot. 6fps,
better iso performance, better dynamic range, and better video features (1080p 60p, higher bit rate, All-I, etc??) would go a long way.

Also, to the guy saying a tilt screen was a fad. Well, for video users that is a must. I would not buy a DSLR without it. Please be aware of uses other than your own before posting next time.
 
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I'm holding out hope for better IQ.

There's no point in introducing a 7DII unless Canon expects it to continue to be the entry-level pro sports/wildlife body of choice for a few years to come. It makes no sense to up the MP and frame rate without first improving IQ and high ISO performance.

Higher MP and FPS sound great as a marketing tool. Sure, a frame rate of 10 fps has some benefits. But for most sporting events, shotgun shooting in bursts is no substitute for timing that first shot.

The 7D is marketed as a sports body for those not ready for the 1D-X and the necessarily longer glass required to achieve the same field of view. Both bodies share the same 18 megapixels. I don't think the target audience for the 7DII will be wowed by higher MP and FPS alone – as exemplified in this thread.

Further, the 7D is one way to get serious amateurs and would-be pros hooked on Canon and invested in more L-glass. Their next path upward is the 5DIII or 1D-X. I would think Canon wants to continue this progression path.

In short, Canon must top the Nikon D7000 in every aspect – especially IQ and ISO performance. Why let Nikon continue to own the best high ISO performance APS-C body? As budding low-light sports photographers look to the D7000, Canon loses out on their progression strategy to sell more 5D's and 1D's.

For me, I'd be happy if the 7DII only had two improvements:

1. Best in class high ISO noise reduction
2. Locking mode dial (I hate it when I bump out of M to Bulb)

(As an owner of the 60D and a 7D, I would enjoy the addition of an articulated screen on a 7DII. I have been hooked on one ever since my G3. A don't think the articulated screen is a fad as suggested, but I do doubt that a body aimed at pros or semi-pros will have one simply do to the risk of breaking the thing when shooting under pressure.)
 
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verysimplejason said:
pierceography said:
DB said:
If Canon do that and price it at $2k then I'll sell my 7D and buy a 7D2, in other words; I'd pay another 500 for those upgrades.

Agreed. But if the camera is over the $2,000 mark, there had better be some REALLY nice features to justify the price to upgrade. And I'm not talking about GPS, articulating screen, or touch screen. In fact, I'd pay money NOT to have the last two "features" on a prosumer SLR.

Why do you hate an articulating screen? That's one thing I can't understand. The articulating screen increases your creativity if you know how to use it. As long as canon can maintain the durability and weather proofing of the camera, articulating screen is great. At least it's there when you need it.

For me the articulated screen presents two major problems. First, a Canon style articulated screen means that many of the buttons on the left side of the screen will have to disappear. The articulated screen uses a lot of area on the back of the camera. The second is the compromised weatherproofing. Currently, the the pop-up flash is the main weatherproofing weakness. I can work around that by sealing the flash with electricans tape when I'm going out
in the weather. Yes, Canon can try to seal moving parts, but how long will they stay sealed?
 
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that1guyy said:
ag25 said:
I've been waiting to upgrade from my T1i, and was hoping to wait for a 60D successor. I found the T1i simply too small, especially after acquiring my telephoto lens.

This should be interesting, because if they merge the two in the upwards direction there will be a sizeable gap between the T4i-series models.

Hopefully the new sensor beings some improvements.

Hah. Exactly like me. I am seriously wanting to upgrade my T1i and a 70D would definitely hit the spot. 6fps,
better iso performance, better dynamic range, and better video features (1080p 60p, higher bit rate, All-I, etc??) would go a long way.

Also, to the guy saying a tilt screen was a fad. Well, for video users that is a must. I would not buy a DSLR without it. Please be aware of uses other than your own before posting next time.

I shoot a lot of video - typically 2 x dslr multicam with zoom h4n + lavalier mics etc. and you have either a micro-USB slot (for laptop tethering) or a mini-hdmi out to ext AV screen -> clearly you don't know what those flaps on the side of your camera are for.

Proof of the pudding is in the eating -> last canon DSLR to have a tilt screen was the 650D, the 5D3/1DX/6D did not get them, nor will a 7D2 as swivel screen are for hobbyists with Rebel bodies, and are less useful than an external wireless monitor (thanks to the intro of WiFi).

Canon have both segments covered - serious videographer will have HDMI-out, the amateur will have their smartphone, iPad or MP4 player which is way more flexible than an articulated screen.

Tech has moved on (WiFi is the new anywhere screen), so should you. Time will tell, and I'm betting that I'll be proved right and you will be proved wrong....and I will remind you that day that the 7D2 is eventually announced
 
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Ok, I'll play. Here are the features/specs I'd be willing to bet on.

Single Processor, Digic 5+ (dual chip is just an added expense, a single 5+ is more than capable)
Single CF card slot (2nd slot = added expense, and pros that use the 7D as a 2nd camera will want compatible cards)

That's it, the two specs I'm willing to bet on.

What I'd like in a 7D Mark II...

New sensor tech, still @ 18mp, better ISO performance (low and high)
The same AF sensor and metering as the 5D3
No pop up flash, but a built in lowlight autofocus assist, and built in radio trigger and control for new Canon Flashes.
Locking Dial.

That's it, that's what would get me to upgrade from a 7D to a 7D2. An AF sensor that covers almost the entire frame when used with Canon EF lenses would be huge, when the camera senses an EF-S lens it could disable the outer points.

I don't want GPS. WiFi, I can take or leave. I really don't care about video, I absolutely don't want a swivel or touch screen.
 
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that1guyy said:
ag25 said:
I've been waiting to upgrade from my T1i, and was hoping to wait for a 60D successor. I found the T1i simply too small, especially after acquiring my telephoto lens.

This should be interesting, because if they merge the two in the upwards direction there will be a sizeable gap between the T4i-series models.

Hopefully the new sensor beings some improvements.

Hah. Exactly like me. I am seriously wanting to upgrade my T1i and a 70D would definitely hit the spot. 6fps,
better iso performance, better dynamic range, and better video features (1080p 60p, higher bit rate, All-I, etc??) would go a long way.

Also, to the guy saying a tilt screen was a fad. Well, for video users that is a must. I would not buy a DSLR without it. Please be aware of uses other than your own before posting next time.

Agreed, even if it's still $1700 there's something of a gap in the $1000-1200 range for an XXD body.

As for the articulated screen...this is going to sound a bit snarky, but many (most?) of us use DSLR's as STILLS cameras. Not video cameras. I understand how a articulated screen would be great for video use, but I'd think you'd really want to get one of those external LCD's you which offer a bigger view of what you're shooting.
 
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al2 said:
verysimplejason said:
pierceography said:
DB said:
If Canon do that and price it at $2k then I'll sell my 7D and buy a 7D2, in other words; I'd pay another 500 for those upgrades.

Agreed. But if the camera is over the $2,000 mark, there had better be some REALLY nice features to justify the price to upgrade. And I'm not talking about GPS, articulating screen, or touch screen. In fact, I'd pay money NOT to have the last two "features" on a prosumer SLR.

Why do you hate an articulating screen? That's one thing I can't understand. The articulating screen increases your creativity if you know how to use it. As long as canon can maintain the durability and weather proofing of the camera, articulating screen is great. At least it's there when you need it.

For me the articulated screen presents two major problems. First, a Canon style articulated screen means that many of the buttons on the left side of the screen will have to disappear. The articulated screen uses a lot of area on the back of the camera. The second is the compromised weatherproofing. Currently, the the pop-up flash is the main weatherproofing weakness. I can work around that by sealing the flash with electricans tape when I'm going out
in the weather. Yes, Canon can try to seal moving parts, but how long will they stay sealed?

+1 Canon will not degrade the 7D model with a tilt screen that compromises quality (weather-sealing) and results in loss of external buttons, especially when you can have any screen you like in your hand that is no longer physically attached to the camera body thanks to WiFi.
 
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al2 said:
verysimplejason said:
pierceography said:
DB said:
If Canon do that and price it at $2k then I'll sell my 7D and buy a 7D2, in other words; I'd pay another 500 for those upgrades.

Agreed. But if the camera is over the $2,000 mark, there had better be some REALLY nice features to justify the price to upgrade. And I'm not talking about GPS, articulating screen, or touch screen. In fact, I'd pay money NOT to have the last two "features" on a prosumer SLR.

Why do you hate an articulating screen? That's one thing I can't understand. The articulating screen increases your creativity if you know how to use it. As long as canon can maintain the durability and weather proofing of the camera, articulating screen is great. At least it's there when you need it.

For me the articulated screen presents two major problems. First, a Canon style articulated screen means that many of the buttons on the left side of the screen will have to disappear. The articulated screen uses a lot of area on the back of the camera. The second is the compromised weatherproofing. Currently, the the pop-up flash is the main weatherproofing weakness. I can work around that by sealing the flash with electricans tape when I'm going out
in the weather. Yes, Canon can try to seal moving parts, but how long will they stay sealed?

Definitely agree with those two points. And there's a third: build quality. Right now, the 7D is on par with the build quality of a pro level camera. If you add an articulating screen, you're basically running the life span of the camera into the ground. Even if you're incredibly careful with your equipment, your chances of damaging the camera increase exponentially when you start messing with retractable elements. The popup flash on my 7D already fails to pop up 3/4 of the time. So no thanks to moveable LCD.

And as for the screen increasing your creativity, well... I guess you'll just have to get dirty. I've come back from plenty of shoots where my clothes were completely filthy from being on my stomach getting a shot. If you're not willing to get dirty to get a shot, then it must not have been that good to begin with.
 
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Gotta keep the two processors. It's the secret to the focusing performance and may be the key to increased high ISO performance.

As for the articulating screen, I don't understand the "it's for hobbyist" attack. Even the old Canon F-1 offered additional viewfinders for alternative viewing angles. It has function and value.

However, the articulating screen does decrease the durability of the body. Fast action shooting, maybe with multiple bodies, increases the risk of damage to the screen when it's out. I doubt that any "pro-level" Canon body will have the articulating screen for fear that they will see more of them returned for service and deflate the durability reputation. Still, I'd welcome the articulating screen on the 7DII.
 
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I have a 5DMkIII but can't beat my 7D for night sports and action. Many friends I know like me would jump at a 7D MkII with better noise control at high ISO. The 1.6 factor makes our 70-200 a f2.8 112-320 super zoom and Sigma 120-300 a powerful and fast f2.8 192-480 . Dark high school stadiums, gyms, theaters, and other outdoor action benefit from crop for fast zoom, high iso. Quiet mode from 5DmkIII is great, hope that they include it in the 7DMkII and keep the CF card.
 
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