I [...] don't print images to view them at a certain distance...
Since you are already a mirrorless user, how did you find the switch from OVF to EVF? I did look at the R but only in a store, so I have no real world experience.If 85% of the specs are true I will be trading-in my EOS R for the EOS R5 and it would reduce my 5DS to a back-up camera. I would also certainly be replacing my holy trinity to RF from EF.
Perhaps an eager retailer covered the shipping cost that wasn't covered under Canon policy.That wasn’t evident from my first loan but I will certainly investigate. Thanks for the tip.
I 100% agree with everything above.
Where we've disagreed on this thread is the slope of that downward EF usage, as you pointed out.
1) What Canon wants for maximum profit (pull out the rug ASAP, shut down EF aggressively)
2) What Canon can force EF users into doing prematurely (what Canon is probably going to do)
3) What EF users unreasonably want (EF in perpetuity, new EF lenses, etc.)
...are absolutely 3 different things. I simply contend that Canon will be 'impatient, but kind' to the horses that got them here. I still see the EF exodus taking some time for fear of angering its longtime users.
- A
Agree on the current 5D4 being great, particularly for stills.I think a canon would not "shut down EF aggressively" but "bring up RF aggressively", which is vert different. I'd expect more an EF maintenance mode, i.e. just let it be what it is with minor tweaks if needed, rather than heavy back-porting of innovation. Just my 2cents.
I think we can all agree here that a 5Div is a perfectly fine tool for the years to come, just not latest and greatest.
The question that each person who is looking to buy a new camera has to answer to himself or herself is can it meet my needs in the future? Will I miss out too much on the new RF glass that is here and coming soon or is the existing EF glass more than sufficient? Will I get into video or am I sticking to stills? Also, knowing that the EF line is on the down cycle, am I paying the right price for this camera or should I be getting a larger discount?
Actually we were into semantic a while ago.I'm so glad it only took 75 pages for the R5 thread to segue into a lesson on semantics
Only Canon knows for sure!Sure, but for every answer to your question that says 'bite the bullet and move to RF to future proof my world', there are takeaways. Consider a current 5D4 owner sizing up a move to an R5:
I think the R5 specs will flip a lot of 5D3 holdouts and current 5D4 users, don't get me wrong. But I think a 5D5 with similar specs will happen.
- Will EF really go away during the 4-5 years I will use this new body?
- Will I miss my OVF, the responsiveness, etc.?
- Will I go through a painful migration (to mirrorless and the control set in general) in a new R5 only to see a 5D5 come out with the same specs at some point?
- A
Actually, we are still trying to help you understand what dynamic range is.During the last few pages we didn't even touch that topic.
I'm sure you would be surprised to learn that it's actually15 stops of DR you are talking about.And no, 14-bit sensor can't produce a raw file with more than 14 stops of DR.
Is it even a thing - downsampling in 14 bits?Moreover you don't get additional DR by simple downsampling. You need to convert to 16 or 32 bits, then downsample.
The question is: if the DR at 45Mpix or 60Mpix resolution is important to you, how are you going to get it from a 30Mpix sensor?But that's not the original file and most importantly not the original resolution is it? I think the DR at native resolution is also important, or per-pixel DR before any conversions.
If you convert it on a scanner with the resolution enough to resolve single silver grains (which are submicronic in size, so you will need a 100k+ DPI scanner), you will get a binary image. You can convert it into 8, 14, 16, 24, 32, 48, 64, or whatever number of bits per pixel you want, but it will be binary.If you convert it to digital (by scanning), you'll get a 16-bit image and will be able to calculate the DR. If you don't want to convert it, you use analog methods to calculate S/N.
Such digital 1-bit-per-pixel sensors are already proposed.You'd probably need to normalise both film and digital in order to compare, if you want to compare film and digital. Neither of imaginable comparison methods will involve converting film crystals into 1-bit pixels. Most likely you'll figure out the resolution of the film first and then you'll get a number of "1-bit crystals" per resolving unit area, not just one bit. But the crystals in film are not laid out in a nice regular 2D grid, they're stacked and overlap in 3D. Overall this comparison of film to 1-bit sensor is fallacious.
As of now, I don't own a full frame of any type, and this looks like the one I want to start with. (Which at least eliminates the issue of whether to transition away from a 5D of some sort.)
Knowing I wanted to go full frame someday, I've avoided EF-S lenses (yes, I know they work on R mounts--but if that's what I have, what's the point of a full frame camera?) for the last year or so--but have bought EF lenses.
It'll just be a matter of the R5's price. I probably won't be one of the first-day buyers!
I expect that for me the R5 will be too expensive and will go R6 instead.
Your argument seems to assume both EF and RF are equally mature systems. They are not. Canon has sold over 100 million EF EOS cameras and 130 million EF/EF-S/TS-E/MP-E lenses. Many of those cameras and their users are still out there taking photos.
As long as there is sufficient demand for EF lenses, Canon will continue to crank out more of those fully mature current designs to meet that demand. If stock drops enough while specific models are still selling well, they'll continue to make more of them.
The reason Canon hasn't made more EF-M lenses has nothing to do with the introduction of RF. It has to do with what lenses will sell in sufficient numbers to those who purchase EF-M cameras. As long as the EF-M system is the best selling mirrorless camera system on the planet, it's not going anywhere. They don't need any more EF-M lenses. They're selling plenty of EF-M cameras just fine, thank you, with the lenses they already have. Those lenses are all that 95% of EF-M camera users want.
It should be fairly obvious that Canon is not aiming for the same market segment with the EF-M line that they are going for with the RF line. Otherwise they would not have made it impossible to use RF glass on EF-M bodies.
As of now, I don't own a full frame of any type, and this looks like the one I want to start with. (Which at least eliminates the issue of whether to transition away from a 5D of some sort.)
Knowing I wanted to go full frame someday, I've avoided EF-S lenses (yes, I know they work on R mounts--but if that's what I have, what's the point of a full frame camera?) for the last year or so--but have bought EF lenses.
It'll just be a matter of the R5's price. I probably won't be one of the first-day buyers!
I expect that for me the R5 will be too expensive and will go R6 instead.
I am not a specialist in economics, but would it make sense for a business to announce a better and cheaper product, which includes the latest technology included in its flagship product, even before starting to sell its flagship product ?
Well, that's just a matter of semanticsActually we were into semantic a while ago.