I’d like to see them match the FPS of the Sony a7RIVSounds bloody good to me! If it can match the EOS R in FPS with 75mp and good dynamic range then that’s impressive.
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I’d like to see them match the FPS of the Sony a7RIVSounds bloody good to me! If it can match the EOS R in FPS with 75mp and good dynamic range then that’s impressive.
Suffice to say I'm minded to disagree with almost all of your points...well, I photograph architecture as a full time job and sometimes do products as well. there is a big difference in sharpness between 5Ds and 5Dsr and basically everything else is a consequence of this choice. for example you think that 24-70 2.8L is a sharp lens and I got rid of it when I had my 1Ds MkII for the quality reasons. I just don't think you should be using such good for portraits lens for product shots but happy days if you have the client who pays for the job... I use tilt and shift lenses, the same ones you mentioned, and to be honest it doesn't matter what year the lens was built as for example 90mm ts is one of the sharpest lenses canon made and on the other side of the scale is 45mm ts (mark one) which was a disaster, the worst chromatic aberration canon pro lens ever. talking about computers, well, once you get real busy with the postproduction you will start thinking about it, not to mention the beautiful 27 inch retina displays that are one of the tools to show you what your files are really look like. if you don't have such display, no wonder you don't see the problem. all the best!
w
nope it's a should-be, not a must-be, in my opinion.IBIS is a must.
Mount an L bracket the other way?
This is the case on certain L brackets but when you buy a well designed model such as from RRS it will work.
a tsunami alert for all of those who think that buying a high megapixel camera is so cool idea. I've been using 5dsr (50 megapixel) for the past three years and I need to warn you that there will be some consequences. A financial consequences I mean if you are serious about the quality. First you will replace half of your lenses as you will notice a lot of underperforming ones in terms of sharpness and chromatic aberration.
Then you will buy the most expensive computers (imac and macbook pro if you are a mac lover) as your old ones will be too slow, wasting in average two hours of your time per day if you shooting raw.
And for those of you who think shooting medium raw is such an excellent idea I would like to say that I tough that too until I saw a very annoying color difference in blacks (greenish blacks) that appear only in smaller than full size raws. Here you go.
Not to mention the storage. Prepare some more cash and you are good to go. The good side is the quality. Once you can afford all those you will never go back. w
well, I photograph architecture as a full time job and sometimes do products as well. there is a big difference in sharpness between 5Ds and 5Dsr
Does a high megapixel camera really perform any worse in low light compared to a low MP camera? One big caveat I want to say is this though, I'm talking about at the same viewing size!
Why would you prefer a tilt screen when a flippy one does the same thing, plus more?
Then the whole point of the camera is not for you. Every model can't fit every use or user case, there hasn't been a 'best' camera for a long time.
If it is a two-way tilt (like Fuji), it allows users to be more discrete as it is far less obvious when deployed. It is also more compact when deployed and doesn't interfere with an L-bracket.
My preference is an articulated screen.If that is close I will be getting one. 75mp, DR, weather sealed.
I'd prefer a tilt screen than a flip screen but am comfortable within my own mind to know Canon don't care what I, as an individual, want...
I meant having an articulated screen vs a tilting screen is useless unless you are a vlogger.Speak for yourself. I love my articulating screen. I am not a Vlogger.
...Fully weather-sealed ...
I want to underscore that the EOS R actually did very well in our weather-sealing tests. It passed the standard 35-minute heavy rain test with absolutely no problems, and in fact was more controllable than virtually any other camera we've weather-tested, because its touch-screen remained fully functional, and the eye sensor on the electronic viewfinder was largely unaffected by the precipitation.
It took 50 minutes of additional drenching the following day before it showed any problems at all, but when it finally did give up the fight, it was pretty obvious, as most of the rear- and top-panel control buttons just stopped working altogether. But note that this was after 85 minutes of being fully exposed to heavy rain with no protection whatsoever, an impressive performance compared to many other cameras we've tested so far.
Certainly the GFX100 tilts to the right (as well as up and down) so is useful for low level portrait orientation angles.As far as I understand, in Fuji it only tilts up and down, not left and right, which renders it useless when shooting in portrait orientation.