ahsanford said:
I just think the argument has sublimed above basic forum back and forth and become one of those religiously held beliefs we won't ever sway on, like to use / not use UV filters, the value of IS on wide angle lenses, etc.
- A
Very True.
Sporgon said:
ahsanford said:
Serious 7D shooters are not necessarily amateurs on tight budgets.
Not everyone can afford to spend significant amounts of money on a camera body, or indeed lenses, yet they may wish or really
need to have a given performance...
For the images that these people are producing there will be no perceivable difference between FF or crop; no one will know the difference. That situation will change in low light sports though. Will this situation change; will Canon
want it to change ? This may be one reason why the new 7DII won't be 16 mp. It is one thing to offer a cheaper, credible alternate to those that cannot afford a 1Dx, but quite another to allow that cheaper alternative to compete in every sphere!
Very True, also.
We are only weeks away from knowing, but I'll risk it by repeating my prediction.
I am expecting that the 7DII will be about 24mp. The sensor will perform better in low light and high ISO than the 70D, but it's not going to go into 5D, 1DX or 6D territory. (Physics is a stubborn thing).
Like all modern DSLRs, it will be a fine, all-purpose camera. But, it's greatest strength will be in taking advantage of the benefits of the APS-C sensor size. It will have autofocusing capabilities equal to or exceeding the 5DIII and with f8 autofocusing, daylight sports, bird and wildlife photographers will be able to mount the new 100-400 zoom with a 1.4 III tele-extender to go to an effective 900 mm before cropping. With 24mp, they can crop away half the image and still have excellent results (1,800 mm anyone?)
Canon very specifically targeted the 5DIII to wedding and event photographers and it was a huge success. People need to understand how target marketing works in this case. By having a specific market in mind for the 5DIII, Canon has a guaranteed user base that it could build off of. Doesn't mean it's not a great camera for others – I own one and I would shoot myself before I would shoot a wedding. It just means they had a base of customers in mind when they released it and it worked well for them.
With the 7DII they will target it to birders, wildlife and sports shooters. People who either need it for their living (sports shooters) or who have disposable income to spend on their hobby (bird and wildlife photographers). Just as the 5DIII became the "must have" camera for wedding photographers, the 7DII will be a "must have" for these folks.
ahsanford said:
luckydude said:
Don't get me wrong, the 7D is a capable camera, I think it gets beat up a bit too much on the forums. It's just that the 5D is better. I'm really hoping that the 7DII is like a 5DIII w/ a 1.6x TC that doesn't take a stop of light and doesn't drop the image quality. That would be worth a lot to anyone who does wildlife, especially birds.
But I think you realize the madness of Canon were they to offer it. Even if they could pull off a 'crop 5D3' with the same IQ, to do so would damage their FF body sales
and the sale of their superteles. People could simply do more (on the long end) with less gear. Canon probably does not want that.
- A
The only point I disagree with is that I don't think Canon is worried about the sales of their super-telephotos in this way. They aren't stupid. They know that only the tiniest fraction of their customer base can ever afford anything more than the 100-400 zoom and even that is pushing it for most customers.
If they can sell a hundred 7DIIs with a 100-400 zoom for every one $10,000 super telephoto, they'll happily do that and it's probably not at all unrealistic.
Bottom line -- if you are looking for a crop sensor that performs as well in low light as a 1Dx at a fraction of the price you can start writing your whining posts now, because it isn't going to happen.
I repeat a core premise: DSLR manufacturers need to expand their market. They can do so by finding new buyers, but that's getting more and more difficult. A much more realistic strategy is to turn their existing customers into two-body customers.
They want us all to buy a full frame body for low light performance and an APS-C body for reach and resolution.