unfocused
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Well, first, Canon source apparently said no Mk V, not no DSLR, so responding as if there will be no option doesn't make total sense. Maybe a new DSLR line to combine several others as they shrink down that market offering. I could see a combo of the 5D line with its best features and the 1DX3 best features put into a new monster priced about the same as the R5 but with a higher resolution sensor.
As I said earlier, I think an amalgamation of the 5D and 6D is more likely. Canon already did that with the 80D and 7D, so it makes sense that they would be considering the same with their full frame DSLRs. Good news, it should be cheaper than the 5D. Bad news is there will be compromises. Repeating myself I know, but I don't think it's hard to imagine a new body that has:
- Same sensor as R5;
- Dual SD II slots (No CFexpress)
- Flip Screen like 6D
- Joystick like R5 and 5D
- No IBIS
- 10 fps
- Build somewhere between 6D and 5D
- Autofocus carried over from 5DIV (Maybe some improvement like eye, face or animal face detect)
- A bonus would be the 1DxIII thumb controller
- I would expect that it would be a little more 5D than 6D, just as the 90D is really more 7D than 80D.
- No 8K or other high-end video features (the R5 will remain the video king)
Given the aggressive pricing that Canon offered on the 90D, they might sell it for under $2,500.
With aggressive pricing, I could see a lot of enthusiasts and pros who don't need the build of the 1Dx happy with the compromises.
Canon's line up for the next few years might be:
- Two full frame DSLRs -- 1Dx III and the new amalgamation;
- Six full frame mirrorless -- RP, R, RA, R6, R5 and R5S (High Megapixel) Sorry, but if there is no room in the market for separate 5D and a 6D bodies, there probably isn't room for both an R5 and an R1 now. It might be a possibility around the time of the 2024 Summer Olympics, but honestly, if the R5 delivers, I'm not sure what an R1 gets you except a bigger battery. I expect that eventually they will drop the R and or the RP, but at this point they can just leave them in the lineup;
- A range of M bodies, with the M7 sitting at the top of the line as the replacement for the 7D (Canon wants to get out of the business of mixing full frame and APS-C lineups and an M version of the 7D makes the most sense);
- 90D with future models being badged as 90D Mk II, etc.
This sort of a lineup would see Canon through for the next several years as they watch the market and determine whether or not there will be a smaller but stable demand for DSLRs or if the demand is going to go away.
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