jdramirez said:For studio work? I just presume that pixel density will require a decrease in high iso performance... consequently... you are shooting in daylight or in studio.9VIII said:Bruce Photography said:If I knew today that Canon would not ever produce a full frame high MP camera I would start dumping all my Canon equipment.
I'm in pretty much the same boat. Everything but the 400f5.6 and 7D2 (when it comes).
I really would doubt anyone would want to pay $4000ish for a body as an all round body and try and shoot in low light at high iso with the grain comparable to a crop sensor. It doesn't make a whole heck of a lot of sense.
Don Haines said:unfocused said:Well, that should stir things up a bit.
Here's the setup: Phase One and Hasselblad have announced 50 mp sensors for their large format (I really don't feel that we can refer to these as "medium" format anymore) cameras.
Some may see this as a sign that Canon "must" now offer a high megapixel sensor. I think just the opposite.
We have discussed to the point of nausea the idea that the larger sensor size of "full frame" cameras will always outperform APS-C. So the same principle applies here. There is simply no way that a DSLR sensor can match the performance of these large format sensors. Scale up a 19 mp APS-C sensor and you get to just under 50 mp., so you are talking about pixel density somewhere between that of the 7D and 70D to match the new 50 mp of these large format cameras.
If Canon cannot compete on quality, they can only compete on price. So, then the question becomes, what percentage of the large format market is price sensitive? I'm guessing that few current users of either Phase One or Hasselblad would be convinced to switch based on pricing. That, in turn, leaves the sales potential only for new users. The point is we are talking about a niche, within a niche, within a niche.
Now, if Canon were to take one of their APS-C sensors and simply scale it up to full frame they might be able to keep their development costs down, but would it be low enough to turn a profit on the body? I don't know. And, you'd have to account for the extra waste that would occur with the larger sensors.
All in all, I'm thinking that a high megapixel body is becoming less and less appealing for manufacturers.
Let the flame wars begin!!!
I don't agree 100 percent, but I do mostly agree...
FF beats APS-C for IQ due to the larger pizel size..... Always has, always will....
Large format beats FF for the exact same reasons...
but I do think that in the continual quest for more pixels that we will end up with a high megapixel FF camera that has similar pixel size and IQ to that of APS-C....
klickflip said:They will definitely, the main reason - Phase one and Hasselblad have announced 50MP Cmos sensors which are presumably made by Sony, it could be someone else like Dalsa but bets are on Sony with their 36MP tech it seems very plausible.
So the gauntlet is really down in Cmos 50MP land for canon to respond, I imagine Canon have something nearly ready by now and this may spur them to push it out quicker which would be nice.. or canon may have to buy off Sony to keep in the game.
Now MF is a different kettle of fish, and this could really help MF regain some ground back to DSLRs with quicker capture and higher iso, a much more versatile camera, though AF still is years behind basic canons & nikons.
And this could bring costs down but I wound't imagine too much.
Large format is another thing altogether so please don't try to redefine them. Having a plate camera with lens movements is the key. I've always foreseen that sensor tech will catch up and one day we will get 5x4 or at least 7x9 backs for 5x4 systems.
CarlTN said:jrista said:Soon Sony will have some kind of 54mp masterpiece on the market as well (using non-square pixels, to boot!)
I've missed out on this rumor, can you tell what you know so I don't have to look it up myself?
jrista said:CarlTN said:jrista said:Soon Sony will have some kind of 54mp masterpiece on the market as well (using non-square pixels, to boot!)
I've missed out on this rumor, can you tell what you know so I don't have to look it up myself?
Here's the links:
http://www.sonyalpharumors.com/sr5-sony-sensor-revolution-first-non-bayer-sensors-coming-in-2015/
http://image-sensors-world.blogspot.com/2013/12/rumor-sony-to-release-non-bayer-54mp.html
CarlTN said:jrista said:CarlTN said:jrista said:Soon Sony will have some kind of 54mp masterpiece on the market as well (using non-square pixels, to boot!)
I've missed out on this rumor, can you tell what you know so I don't have to look it up myself?
Here's the links:
http://www.sonyalpharumors.com/sr5-sony-sensor-revolution-first-non-bayer-sensors-coming-in-2015/
http://image-sensors-world.blogspot.com/2013/12/rumor-sony-to-release-non-bayer-54mp.html
Thanks. By "large format", I assume they mean something larger than 36mm in width?
CarlTN said:As for the non-bayer array, it's still an array...don't see how it would be any more revolutionary than whatever Fuji has done.
CarlTN said:Both links said "it depends on what the competition does"...as in, they obviously have a good idea what Canon are up to, and want to wait to see when Canon are done with their next generation sensor. Or else it could mean they're waiting to see if Canon releases a medium format sensor...or body.
They are medium format! The 50 MP sensors are appropriate size for medium format, 22 MP scans of medium format images is like taking 10 MP scans of full fromat images. You might as well have ended the sentence after "I don't think".unfocused said:Well, that should stir things up a bit.
Here's the setup: Phase One and Hasselblad have announced 50 mp sensors for their large format (I really don't feel that we can refer to these as "medium" format anymore) cameras.
unfocused said:Some may see this as a sign that Canon "must" now offer a high megapixel sensor. I think just the opposite.
We have discussed to the point of nausea the idea that the larger sensor size of "full frame" cameras will always outperform APS-C. So the same principle applies here. There is simply no way that a DSLR sensor can match the performance of these large format sensors. Scale up a 19 mp APS-C sensor and you get to just under 50 mp., so you are talking about pixel density somewhere between that of the 7D and 70D to match the new 50 mp of these large format cameras.
If Canon cannot compete on quality, they can only compete on price. So, then the question becomes, what percentage of the large format market is price sensitive? I'm guessing that few current users of either Phase One or Hasselblad would be convinced to switch based on pricing. That, in turn, leaves the sales potential only for new users. The point is we are talking about a niche, within a niche, within a niche.
Now, if Canon were to take one of their APS-C sensors and simply scale it up to full frame they might be able to keep their development costs down, but would it be low enough to turn a profit on the body? I don't know. And, you'd have to account for the extra waste that would occur with the larger sensors.
All in all, I'm thinking that a high megapixel body is becoming less and less appealing for manufacturers.
Let the flame wars begin!!!
unfocused said:If Canon cannot compete on quality, they can only compete on price. So, then the question becomes, what percentage of the large format market is price sensitive? I'm guessing that few current users of either Phase One or Hasselblad
Exactly. MF is for specialized use, it's not for everyday shooting. It's slow and big, you absolutely cannot reliably cover sports or anything with quick action using a MF camera only, and MF will NEVER be that camera, unless technology develops in such a way that you can miniaturize and speed up MF to the current FF specs (but by that time the speed and resolution advantage of the FF will have far surpassed the current MF standards).hgraf said:unfocused said:If Canon cannot compete on quality, they can only compete on price. So, then the question becomes, what percentage of the large format market is price sensitive? I'm guessing that few current users of either Phase One or Hasselblad
I don't have the answer, but I don't think you're talking about the large format market. Heck, 33x44 isn't even real medium format?
All that said, the digital medium format market is tiny, I don't think it's something Canon is worried about very much at the moment.
Exactly!flowers said:Exactly. MF is for specialized use, it's not for everyday shooting. It's slow and big, you absolutely cannot reliable cover sports or anything with quick action using a MF camera only, and MF will NEVER be that camera, unless technology develops in such a way that you can miniaturize and speed up MF to the current FF specs (but by that time the speed and resolution advantage of the FF will have far surpassed the current MF standards).hgraf said:unfocused said:If Canon cannot compete on quality, they can only compete on price. So, then the question becomes, what percentage of the large format market is price sensitive? I'm guessing that few current users of either Phase One or Hasselblad
I don't have the answer, but I don't think you're talking about the large format market. Heck, 33x44 isn't even real medium format?
All that said, the digital medium format market is tiny, I don't think it's something Canon is worried about very much at the moment.
If you want to speculate about MF cameras, try shooting with one first.
Large format is only useful for professional landscape photographers and for VERY slow and deliberate portrait work, and there are no digital LF cameras.
I think many people here would be greatly disappointed, if digital LF cameras existed, and they did get to shoot one and then asked "why does the burst mode only take 1 picture every 10 seconds?"
Don Haines said:Exactly!flowers said:Exactly. MF is for specialized use, it's not for everyday shooting. It's slow and big, you absolutely cannot reliable cover sports or anything with quick action using a MF camera only, and MF will NEVER be that camera, unless technology develops in such a way that you can miniaturize and speed up MF to the current FF specs (but by that time the speed and resolution advantage of the FF will have far surpassed the current MF standards).hgraf said:unfocused said:If Canon cannot compete on quality, they can only compete on price. So, then the question becomes, what percentage of the large format market is price sensitive? I'm guessing that few current users of either Phase One or Hasselblad
I don't have the answer, but I don't think you're talking about the large format market. Heck, 33x44 isn't even real medium format?
All that said, the digital medium format market is tiny, I don't think it's something Canon is worried about very much at the moment.
If you want to speculate about MF cameras, try shooting with one first.
Large format is only useful for professional landscape photographers and for VERY slow and deliberate portrait work, and there are no digital LF cameras.
I think many people here would be greatly disappointed, if digital LF cameras existed, and they did get to shoot one and then asked "why does the burst mode only take 1 picture every 10 seconds?"
Plus lens size.... they get huge in a hurry...imagine shooting FF with a 200mm F2.8 lens.... then go medium format and your equivalant field of view comes from something like a 400F2.8 ( a lot less easy to carry around) and if you go large format, imagine carrying around (and paying for) an 800F2.8 lens....
It's not the sensors, it's the glass that will kill you...
Halfrack said:I shoot MFD almost exclusively now, and it teaches you a lot of things. The crop factor isn't .5 - it's like .7, but that depends on what back you're using. The thing that's special about the H5D-50c / IQ250 is that it's a 1.3x crop factor, so kinda like a APS-H. The main feature of the whole CMOS MF chip is ISO, and while you wouldn't shot at ISO3200 for a fashion shoot, you could. It's a first gen product, so we will see how well it goes.
Canon is doing fine selling 22mp bodies, and while I wish they'd up the MP, their focus on lenses and AF has really improved the field. Who makes the best 24-70? Canon... Who makes the best 70-200? Canon... Who makes the best 300/400/500/600/200-400? Canon... If the weakest link in the Canon system is their lack of MPs on a 5D3 or 1Dx, we are sitting mighty pretty.
I would think their Dual-pixel AF stuff in the 70D would be VERY welcome in the MF world - you know that whole 1 or 3 AF point limitations we have. If I were to design a camera today, I'd want one that is the dual personality of a A7r/D800 because some times you want the mirror box and grip for shooting long, but want that shallow mirrorless setup for shooting wide - ala technical camera.