I think they chose 3 in the first place knowing it was likely a one off.
If it was then they would have used a non-numerical name, like the R, Ra or the RP.
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I think they chose 3 in the first place knowing it was likely a one off.
Just put the R5's sensor in the R3's body.Are we missing the obvious here?
Nikon do the same camera, one in a normal body, the other on a gripped body with the Z8 and Z9. So Canon could put the R5 II in a gripped body and call it R3 II...
I can think of one other approach to the R3 II, but I'm almost certain that Canon would not do it - a pro-level crop body.
But what IS great about a "gripped" camera like the R3 is this: one big battery that lasts a long time and is quick and easy to change.
They have done it that way too. But I think the name harked back to the EOS-3, at least in part.If it was then they would have used a non-numerical name, like the R, Ra or the RP.
The R5 (and mark II) reportedly has roughly the same resolving power as the 5DsR, even if it has a slightly lower MP count."The only segmentation that made even a little sense to me was making it a high-resolution camera body. I mean well beyond the 45mp we see in the EOS R5 Mark II."
Canon's continuing inability or unwillingness to produce a high-resolution successor to my 5DsR is the reason that I'm almost certain to move to a different platform during the next year — most likely Sony.
(I don't care if it is "gripped," in fact I prefer that it not be for my purposes — in the same way that the 5DsR was largely the same body as the other 5D series bodies.)
Time will tell, but I doubt we'll see a high MP integrated grip body from Canon in the future. It limits the market, in that an accessory grip can be added and an integrated grip cannot be removed.Why not a High MP gripped camera?
Indeed. Some people conflate MP count and resolution, and some people think a 20-30% increase in MP count makes a big difference.The R5 (and mark II) reportedly has roughly the same resolving power as the 5DsR, even if it has a slightly lower MP count.
no but, the gripped body only helps handheld operation. as soon as a tripod/slider or gimbal is involved, the grip doesnt have much value. I am not sure how much high resolution work is hand held. that said, if r52 had the r3 body and some faster readout that would have been great.Why not a High MP gripped camera? Just because it has a grip doesn't mean it's exclusively for sports photographers.
Agreed... Canon would know the number of grips for R5ii sold but I believe that a Z8/Z9 style versions of the R5ii would have been a better option.Are we missing the obvious here?
Nikon do the same camera, one in a normal body, the other on a gripped body with the Z8 and Z9. So Canon could put the R5 II in a gripped body and call it R3 II...
I think Canon has it exactly right. Sports shooters need high speed but small enough file size to get to the editors quickly! Pro sports shooters make enough to afford R1 bodies. Pro events shooters need the high MP counts in the R5 to get fine deal in the wedding dresses and the beauty of the location of the event.The original Canon EOS R3 was a “stop-gap” for lack of a better term until Canon could develop what they considered a true 1 series flagship. The EOS R3 certainly resembled Canon's gripped DSLRs like the EOS-1D Mark III, that was and is extremely popular among professionals in various disciplines. The EOS R3 has a […]
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The reviewers would certainly punish any Canon attempt for 12k unless it can continuously record for 2 hours without overheatingThere are a few possibilities that could result in a gripped high-res body. For a high-res FF body to be interesting to birders, it would need to put at least as many pixels on the bird as an R7 and preferably more. Canon has had a very strong focus on video lately and were the first with 8k with the R5. The next significant step in video resolution is 12k, which calls for a 101 MP sensor (at 3:2). That sensor would also have to be decently fast (in terms of FF readout) to be acceptable for video. Such a camera run in crop mode could make birders very happy. Now to the nitty gritty. Such a sensor (and its supporting circuitry) would almost certainly be a power hog and battery life with an LP-E6 battery would likely be dismal. That alone could dictate a gripped body. Time will tell, but I can see Canon wanting to be first with 12k (even if such high resolution is essentially useless for anything but post cropping).
I think you're right--there was only one -3 camera in the lineup before, and it was the EOS-3 back in 1998-99. And like the R3, it debuted tech that was new to Canon at the time (45-point focusing sensor, stacked imaging sensor) and had improved eye control focus. If there is an R3 Mark II, it will have some new to Canon tech in it that they want to do a production run on, but not in an established camera series.I feel like naming conventions are quite a good insight into Canon's reasoning. If they change the concept radically then it would surely have a different name. I think they chose 3 in the first place knowing it was likely a one off, as the earlier 3 was. Most of the rest is wishful thinking.
I believe that Canon has the technology now to release a global shutter sensor if they wanted to.How about Canon's first entry into global shutter cameras? It might just be like the current R3 but with global shutter and other features they want to test. Maybe the R3ii to the R1 will be like the A9iii to the A1ii.
I agree, this would be a head-turner in the industry and would make a lot of wildlife people happy if the images are rather clean. Even if the body production run were limited and round-one was more about marketing.I can think of one other approach to the R3 II, but I'm almost certain that Canon would not do it - a pro-level crop body. A stacked or semi-stacked low-noise 32 mpx APS-C sensor on a fast body with a huge battery, built for birding, wildlife, and such for those with a bit of a budget constraint. Who can afford a 600 f/4 and a couple of teleconverters? How about a 400 f/4 instead with a couple of teleconverters. Or the fabled 200-600 f/5.6....
There would be a market for such a camera, although it may be somewhat small. A crop R3 with a couple or 3 fast zooms like a 15-55 f/2.8 or 15-85 f/4 L quality available.