+1te4o said:@moreorless : now this is going to make choices really interesting. I can see current 5D2 users wanting to jump to "your" 3D and first-time-FF users taking your 5D3 prediction. I consider this very business oriented and logical
te4o said:@moreorless : now this is going to make choices really interesting. I can see current 5D2 users wanting to jump to "your" 3D and first-time-FF users taking your 5D3 prediction. I consider this very business oriented and logical
docsmith said:+1te4o said:@moreorless : now this is going to make choices really interesting. I can see current 5D2 users wanting to jump to "your" 3D and first-time-FF users taking your 5D3 prediction. I consider this very business oriented and logical
I think it makes sense for canon to build a high MP FF camera, decrease the frame rate and build quality, and decrease high ISO performance and DR. But then throw a $4,500 price tag on it.
Then, an entry level FF that looks very much like the current 5DII except with perhaps a slightly larger sensor, slightly better AF, and improvements in high ISO and DR.....Perhaps with a decrease in build quality (if 6D). This would likely fit the $2,500-$3,000 price range.
In terms of names, I can see a 3D/5DIII combo or a 5DIII/6D combo.
As has been said above, the 7DII is easier as it is APS-C. I hope that it has better ISO performance and better DR. But I wouldn't be surprised if it is more MP/AF instead.
moreorless said:3D - 30-40 megapixels, 7D AF, 3-4 FPS, 100% viewfinder, pro build/sealing. - $3500-4000
5D mk3 - 18 megapixels, 7D AF, 5-6 FPS, less than 100% viewfinder, current build - $2000-2500
moreorless said:FPS and AF seem the most obvious ways to differentiate a high megapixel body from the 1DX to me.
neuroanatomist said:moreorless said:3D - 30-40 megapixels, 7D AF, 3-4 FPS, 100% viewfinder, pro build/sealing. - $3500-4000
5D mk3 - 18 megapixels, 7D AF, 5-6 FPS, less than 100% viewfinder, current build - $2000-2500
moreorless said:FPS and AF seem the most obvious ways to differentiate a high megapixel body from the 1DX to me.
You're right, the main differentiators will likely be fps and AF. The thing is, the 7D AF is the best Canon AF outside of the 1-series. So, for another FF camera to have the 7D AF would not be a real differentiator. Now, maybe it would...if you really mean the actual 7D AF, i.e. an APS-C-sized AF sensor - that would have the same top/bottom spread as the AF in the 5DII, and a slightly reduced side-to-side spread.
But, I'm pretty sure that you mean the 7D's AF system upscaled to match the FF sensor, meaning even though it only has 19 points, it would covers the same horizontal spread as the 1D X and would even have a slightly larger vertical spread, i.e. much better coverage than the 5DII. The 7D's AF is good enough that Canon borrowed many of those features for the 1D X. They're not going to put an AF that good in a FF body outside of the 1-series, because then they'd be differentiating primarily on fps, and that's not enough.
Consider where the 5D/5DII's AF is positioned in the lineup - it's based on the 20D's AF and thus most similar to the AF system currently in the Rebel/xxxD line (9 points, only one cross-type). I'm ignoring the 6 invisible points on the 5D, since those are intended to help with AI Servo tracking, and while maybe they do help, tracking a moving subject is clearly not the 5DII's forte). In overall performance, the 5DII's Af is a step below the xxD AF. I think a sub-1-series FF will keep the same relative position. It seems likely that the xxD AF will get a bump - it's been used in three bodies (40D through 60D). So, Canon enhances the xxD AF slightly (say, 15 points and better tracking), gives 9 cross type points to the xxxD/Rebel line but none of the sophisticated tracking (and that addresses how they can release a new xxxD in early 2012 with the same 18 MP APS-C sensor), and the next FF gets the FF-sized version of that, with no broader spread of points than is currently in the 5DII.
moreorless said:I agree Canon are likely to keep the 7D line's AF above the 3D/5D/6D but they could equally deside to shift both lines AF upwards.
I wouldnt be supprized if the 7D line generally was pushed up market a little to pickup any 1D users who need the crop and persuade existing users to upgrade. Canon's crop lineup is afterall pretty crowded and a bit more space between each body might help.
I'd be very surprised if Canon plays mix-and-match with DIGIC IV and V. They may continue to use dual CPUs for the 7D's eventual replacement but that combination should handle AE/AF just fine.neuroanatomist said:The 7DII is a bit easier, because of the APS-C sensor. They give it a pair of Digic5's, maybe a Digic4 for AE/AF
That will already be accomplished due to the much higher throughput requirements of a larger-format sensor; a lower framerate will immediately put a camera with a larger pixel count out of consideration by the intended market of this camera.The 5DIII is a bigger challenge. It will certainly have more MP - probably 30+. Because that 'sounds' a lot better than 18 MP, they'll need to incorporate some significant handicaps compared to the 1D X, especially since it will have sufficient MP for an APS-H-size crop with more resolution than the 1D IV.
heavybarrel said:Unfortunately, I think neuro is right... there is a very slim chance that Canon will improve the AF in the 7D after only one generation.