Until then, the price of the by then still great Sony A7sII will be just about right for me as an ultra lowlight body along with my trusty 6D 8)canonic said:Canon Rumors said:<p>The product roadmap for mirrorless from Canon has no been finalized and there’s a good chance we’re going to hear a lot of conflicting information over the coming months. The source doesn’t expect any sort of full frame mirrorless announcement until the end of 2017 at the earliest.</p>
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... until the end of 2017 at the earliest
... too late!
Zv said:Am I right in assuming that current EF-M lenses won't cover a full frame sensor if it were possible to fit one into an EOS M today
jolyonralph said:Zv said:Am I right in assuming that current EF-M lenses won't cover a full frame sensor if it were possible to fit one into an EOS M today
Probably, but you may well be surprised. One interesting experiment is to take standard Canon EF-S lenses and, with the metabones adaptor, use them on the Sony A7RII FF mirrorless. By default it recognises these are APS-C lenses and crops down accordingly (ie 18mpx 1.5x crop rather than 40mpx full frame), but in the menu you can force it to use the full sensor and then we see some interesting things.
Most lenses I tried comfortably fill a much greater area than the APS-C rectangle (albeit with decreased sharpness and vignetting). The venerable EF-S 18-55 kit lens almost fills the full frame sensor at 24mm with just a tiny crop at the corners!
Certainly if you had an EF-M lens and could fit it on a FF mirrorless camera I wouldn't expect FF coverage in every case, but I'd be surprised if you didn't get more than the APS-C area.
If I were Canon, I'd announce a new Mirrorless FF camera as (assuming same sensor size as A7RII) a 18/40mpx camera stating that the standard resolution is 18mpx, with 40mpx full frame available only with suitable lenses.
That way there would be much less confusion.
Also.... It's not like Canon has a huge range of EF-M lenses that would become obsolete right now...
Zv said:Hey, wasn't there a rumor about a new EF-M adaptor? I wonder if that's related somehow to this rumor? Will it be something that will work on this FF mirrorless perhaps?
rrcphoto said:jeffa4444 said:The whole point of mirrorless is to reduce the back-focus
nope, it's to reduce mechanical dependancies on the mirror mechanism - you know.. that's why they call it .. MIRROR-LESS .. and not "short registration distance" cameras?
[/quote
When was the last time you sat on lens standards committees (I am)? I said MIRRORLESS so by defacto that means no mirror which includes its mechanical components. My point was clear a shorter back-focus has advantages in providing uniform light distribution to the whole sensor (which should include a larger image circle to mitigate lens shading in corners) as well as other optical improvements.
Sator said:Canon Rumors said:There will not be a 4th mount (EF, EF-S, EF-M) added to the Canon ILC lineup
Although most readers have jumped to the conclusion that Canon will make a EOS mount (EF mount) mirrorless camera, there is another way of interpreting this. Canon will convert the EF-M mount into a 35mm mount. There is a growing trend towards creating mirrorless mounts with ultra short flange distances e.g. the Sony FE mount with a 18mm flange distance, Leica SL mount with 19mm, and Hasselblad X mount with 20mm. (...)
Mistral75 said:Sator said:Canon Rumors said:There will not be a 4th mount (EF, EF-S, EF-M) added to the Canon ILC lineup
Although most readers have jumped to the conclusion that Canon will make a EOS mount (EF mount) mirrorless camera, there is another way of interpreting this. Canon will convert the EF-M mount into a 35mm mount. There is a growing trend towards creating mirrorless mounts with ultra short flange distances e.g. the Sony FE mount with a 18mm flange distance, Leica SL mount with 19mm, and Hasselblad X mount with 20mm. (...)
Something like that?
neuroanatomist said:ahsanford said:There is a raging debate on this right now on the FF mirrorless post from a few days ago.
Canon can't reasonably support 4 mounts. They have tough decisions to make by the time FF mirrorless arrives.
I'm not convinced they can't just have one EF-M mount, and apply a firmware-driven crop mode when an EF-M lens with an APS-C image circle is mounted.
Note that the Sony FF E-mount has a smaller throat diameter than the EF-M mount. Superimposing the Sony FF sensor onto the M mount opening suggests that it may work...
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AvTvM said:Zv said:Hey, wasn't there a rumor about a new EF-M adaptor? I wonder if that's related somehow to this rumor? Will it be something that will work on this FF mirrorless perhaps?
yes, but ... the rumoured "speedbooster-type" adaptor would work just the other way round: allowing use of FF lenses on crop sensor camera.![]()
There is no adaptor and no method to use crop-lenses usable on FF sensors in any meaningful way. Sensors offering "crop mode" is just a poor workaround when no suitable, proper native FF lenses are available ... either because photog does not have them or because manufacturer does not - yet - make them.
Why is it so difficult for some to understand and accept, that Canon had 2 lines of lenses in the mirrorslapper past and will have 2 lines of lenses in the mirrorrless future?
Yesteryear/mirrorslappers: 1 full range of EF lenses for full frame cameras and 1 limited line of EF-S lenses for crop-sensor cameras
Tomorrow/mirrorless: 1 full assortment of "EF-X" full-frame mirrorless optimized [short flange distance] lenses - including fast, big, fat, expensive L-glass - and 1 limited lineup of size- and budget-oriented EF-M crop lenses
Just like Sony did. From A-mount with FF and a crop lens lines to mirrorless E-Mount, again with crop [E] and FF [FE] lenses.
perfectly fine with me. That's why I have not been buying any EF lenses for some time and limit purchases to dirt-cheap EF-M crop lenses .. until "EF-X" FF mirrorless line finally arrives.
AvTvM said:no matter what rumors say ... there WILL HAVE To BE a new native mirrorless FF mount. Anything else makes no sense. Simple reason: long EF-mount does not allow for small mirrorless cameras. Market for small(er) camera bodies is much larger than market segment wanting big, fat cameras.
neuroanatomist said:Mistral75 said:Sator said:Canon Rumors said:There will not be a 4th mount (EF, EF-S, EF-M) added to the Canon ILC lineup
Although most readers have jumped to the conclusion that Canon will make a EOS mount (EF mount) mirrorless camera, there is another way of interpreting this. Canon will convert the EF-M mount into a 35mm mount. There is a growing trend towards creating mirrorless mounts with ultra short flange distances e.g. the Sony FE mount with a 18mm flange distance, Leica SL mount with 19mm, and Hasselblad X mount with 20mm. (...)
Something like that?
History repeating itself...a year later, almost to the day...
neuroanatomist said:ahsanford said:There is a raging debate on this right now on the FF mirrorless post from a few days ago.
Canon can't reasonably support 4 mounts. They have tough decisions to make by the time FF mirrorless arrives.
I'm not convinced they can't just have one EF-M mount, and apply a firmware-driven crop mode when an EF-M lens with an APS-C image circle is mounted.
Note that the Sony FF E-mount has a smaller throat diameter than the EF-M mount. Superimposing the Sony FF sensor onto the M mount opening suggests that it may work...
![]()
ahsanford said:
AvTvM said:Why is it so difficult for some to understand and accept, that Canon had 2 lines of lenses in the mirrorslapper past and will have 2 lines of lenses in the mirrorrless future?
Yesteryear/mirrorslappers: 1 full range of EF lenses for full frame cameras and 1 limited line of EF-S lenses for crop-sensor cameras
Tomorrow/mirrorless: 1 full assortment of "EF-X" full-frame mirrorless optimized [short flange distance] lenses - including fast, big, fat, expensive L-glass - and 1 limited lineup of size- and budget-oriented EF-M crop lenses
AvTvM said:Market for small(er) camera bodies is much larger than market segment wanting big, fat cameras.
douglaurent said:One very natural 2016 job would be the task to shoot 40-50MP photos with high frame rates, and at the same time stabilized mid range video at f2.8. As a Canon user, you need to carry around a 1DX2, 5D4 and 5DsR, plus a 24-70/2.8 and a 24-70/4 IS, and a 24/2.8 IS, 28/2.8 IS, 35/2 IS, and still don't have 50-70/2.8 covered with IS. As a Sony user, you carry around an A99II and a 16-35/2.8 lens. You literally spend 40% of the money and carry 40% of the weight compared to the Canon solution.
A lot of common real world scenarios will end like this example. You either spend more or carry more stuff, or you are limited in functionality. And right now it looks as if the disadvantage of being a Canon customer will remain at least until the year 2020. The traditional idea of buying Canon products should be reinstalled, which is to get the overall best products, and not products with some of the best features.
AvTvM said:no matter what rumors say ... there WILL HAVE To BE a new native mirrorless FF mount. Anything else makes no sense. Simple reason: long EF-mount does not allow for small mirrorless cameras. Market for small(er) camera bodies is much larger than market segment wanting big, fat cameras.
douglaurent said:One very natural 2016 job would be the task to shoot 40-50MP photos with high frame rates, and at the same time stabilized mid range video at f2.8. As a Canon user, you need to carry around a 1DX2, 5D4 and 5DsR, plus a 24-70/2.8 and a 24-70/4 IS, and a 24/2.8 IS, 28/2.8 IS, 35/2 IS, and still don't have 50-70/2.8 covered with IS. As a Sony user, you carry around an A99II and a 16-35/2.8 lens. You literally spend 40% of the money and carry 40% of the weight compared to the Canon solution.
jeffa4444 said:rrcphoto said:jeffa4444 said:The whole point of mirrorless is to reduce the back-focus
nope, it's to reduce mechanical dependancies on the mirror mechanism - you know.. that's why they call it .. MIRROR-LESS .. and not "short registration distance" cameras?
When was the last time you sat on lens standards committees (I am)? I said MIRRORLESS so by defacto that means no mirror which includes its mechanical components. My point was clear a shorter back-focus has advantages in providing uniform light distribution to the whole sensor (which should include a larger image circle to mitigate lens shading in corners) as well as other optical improvements.