Etienne said:ggweci said:AvTvM said:hmm, comparing size/weight from rumored specs. As feared, it really is as bulky as an SL-1 and much higher than Sony A6300 due to that whale hump on top ...
Canon EOS M5 .............. 115.6 x 89.2 x 60.6 mm, 427g, crop 1.6x
Canon EOS 100D/SL-1 ... 117 x 91 x 69 mm, 407g, crop 1.6x
Canon EOS M3 .............. 111 x 68 x 44 mm, 366g, crop 1.6x
Canon EOS M ................ 109 x 67 x 32 mm, 298g, crop 1.6x
Sony A6300 .................. 120 x 66.9 x 48.8 mm, 361g, crop 1.5x
Sony A7R II .................. 126.9 x 95.7 x 60.3 mm, 582g, FULL FRAME
While not really big, I still find it rather big for a crop sensor cam. Sony manages to fit a FF sensor into this body size. For my use - travel, always on, mpounatainmeering cam ... I was hoping for a more compact package, ideally with pop-up EVF (like e.g. Sony RX1R II).
Now let's see if Canon finally put a regular LP-E6N into the larger grip for decent juice, or whether it will again be just another model-specific, not-backwards compatible, puny, weak, dwarf, toy battery ... NB-xxL.
I expect that the M5 will "feel" much smaller that the SL1 even though the measurements seem similar. I thickness of the M5 includes the substantial grip and protruding EVF, whereas the SL1 is mainly due to the requirement of the mirror box. The actually volume of the SL1 would be a fair bit greater.
I think the M5 body is slightly thicker than the M3, based on what I can decipher from the size of hot hotshot, but overall pretty close. Also, the added depth of the grip (which looks to help ergonomics tremendously vs the original Ms), will not be a concern once you at a lens, even the pancake.
As the Sony's current A7 models, yes they are very compact given the sensor, but once you throw a lens on there, they get big fast (unless you stick to their 35mm f2.8 pancake).
I know this is not apples to apples, as the Sony is FF f4 constant, but check out this comparison with the UW zooms - Canon M vs SL1 vs A7Rii
http://camerasize.com/compact/#599.386,448.424,624.440,ha,t
The M definitely offers size advantages vs even the Canon crops.
If you can stick with just the pancakes for your travel camera, the the A7's are mighty tempting.
http://camerasize.com/compact/#599.349,448.439,624.394,ha,t
Agreed. The size and weight look great to me. Too small quickly becomes impossible-to-use except in full automatic.
yes, form factor/size and ergonomics/buttons is the aspect were you really can´t get it all. I think it looks great, but it is not small. But I see it more as it in some sense sum up the all canon crop line (dsls) in to one small camera and replace/rule them all
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