Marsu42 said:Not putting too fine a point on it: How could you tell? The 6d is not out long enough to evaluate its durability, but the specs cast a doubt on it (short shutter life, no 1/8000 shutter) plus it's only "amateur" cps silver in the EU vs. 5d2/5d3 "platinum" which might mean it's just marketing, but then again it might mean Canon really thinks the 6d will be broken more
Marsu42 said:CarlTN said:The solidity of the 6D is not an issue, it is very rigid and robust. There really is no major issue at all.
Not putting too fine a point on it: How could you tell?
Skirball said:You're right, you can't. But it goes the other way too. People talk a lot of the increased durability of the bigger heavier cameras, but the data is anecdotal at best.
Marsu42 said:Skirball said:You're right, you can't. But it goes the other way too. People talk a lot of the increased durability of the bigger heavier cameras, but the data is anecdotal at best.
... except for shutter life, there's no doubt more expensive cameras are built to withstand shooting at max. shutter speed, while a landscape/portrait camera like the 6d won't withstand that abuse but is expected to be shot at moderate shutter speeds.
Marsu42 said:That's probable also the reason why Canon fw disables 1/8000s shutter - you can set it with Magic Lantern (but Canon keeps resetting it) which most likely means Canon considered a 6d with 1/8000s but then decided against it, may it be because of marketing or durability or both.
unfocused said:I pretty much quit worrying about sturdiness after watching that Digital Rev segment where they abuse a Rebel and a similar level Nikon.
Skirball said:Not to derail the discussion, but how is the ML with 6D? I poked my nose in a few months ago and it wasn't official yet so I thought I'd wait.
think it will outlast the 70D..... which will be overshadowed by the 7D II.jm said:i think give the awsmness of the 70d and crappy auto-focus of the 6d, it has to go. aside from auto-focus, its an amazing camera with great image quality and features.
http://www.johnmckayphotography.com
Marsu42 said:CarlTN said:The solidity of the 6D is not an issue, it is very rigid and robust. There really is no major issue at all.
Not putting too fine a point on it: How could you tell? The 6d is not out long enough to evaluate its durability, but the specs cast a doubt on it (short shutter life, no 1/8000 shutter) plus it's only "amateur" cps silver in the EU vs. 5d2/5d3 "platinum" which might mean it's just marketing, but then again it might mean Canon really thinks the 6d will be broken more often.
CarlTN said:I guess what I'm saying is, I see zero valid reason to buy a used 5D2 over a new or used 6D today...other than nostalgia.
Joystick is nice if your other camera bodies also have it (that's why I'm happy with my 60d & 6d) ... and for the 5d2 there's longer shutter life, 1/8000s shutter speed, 1/200 x-sync which are important/hard aspects and might make some people decide still for the 5d2.
Sporgon said:Marsu42 said:Not putting too fine a point on it: How could you tell? The 6d is not out long enough to evaluate its durability, but the specs cast a doubt on it (short shutter life, no 1/8000 shutter) plus it's only "amateur" cps silver in the EU vs. 5d2/5d3 "platinum" which might mean it's just marketing, but then again it might mean Canon really thinks the 6d will be broken more
I noticed this too. The original 5D is 'gold'. The 6D sits in a different marketing position that it's creation created. It wouldn't surprise me if the 6D uses quite a few 5D mkii parts such as the prism, shutter etc and the syncs, max Ss etc are just marketing. Only time will tell on the durability, but I'm quite confident.
Skirball said:Marsu42 said:Skirball said:You're right, you can't. But it goes the other way too. People talk a lot of the increased durability of the bigger heavier cameras, but the data is anecdotal at best.
... except for shutter life, there's no doubt more expensive cameras are built to withstand shooting at max. shutter speed, while a landscape/portrait camera like the 6d won't withstand that abuse but is expected to be shot at moderate shutter speeds.
Yes, agreed. I actually had a "except for shutter life..." in my original post but I pulled it out to keep it shorter. But to me that has more to do with the fact that Canon made a claim on the shutter life, so I would hold Canon to it if it came up short. But even that is just a guideline, I had well over 100k on my 450D before I replaced it, and it’s still shooting just fine.
And I’m not claiming that Rebels are as robust as higher end models, just that the perceived robustness of higher end models may not make a marked difference in the life span in general.
CarlTN said:Frankly I don't need to shoot 150,000 cycles at 1/8000 of a second, and neither does anyone else in the world for that matter. 1/4000 of a second more than gets the job done.
neuroanatomist said:CarlTN said:Frankly I don't need to shoot 150,000 cycles at 1/8000 of a second, and neither does anyone else in the world for that matter. 1/4000 of a second more than gets the job done.
Good point, I don't think I've ever needed 1/8000 s to stop action when 1/4000 s wouldn't have worked (though I have had times when neither were fast enough, and I needed the ~1/30000 s duration of a Speedlite at 1/128 power). But, it's not only about stopping action - I've used 1/8000 many times. The extra stop is useful when shooting outdoor portraits with a fast prime, if you don't have an ND filter handy, want a strong background blur, and don't want blown highlights.
CarlTN said:True...but an ND filter costs a lot less than $1200, if you need to shoot f/1.2 in bright sunlight.
CarlTN said:or going from 1/180 sync to 1/200...
CarlTN said:or an extra 50k shutter cycles 5 years from now (pretty sure I will have sold my own 6D before it even hits 30 or 40k cycles...let alone 100k...my 50D only had 25k cycles in 4 years.
Marsu42 said:CarlTN said:True...but an ND filter costs a lot less than $1200, if you need to shoot f/1.2 in bright sunlight.
The situation where the lack of 1/8000 hurts is bracketing in bright light, for example if you've got the evening sun in the picture... and you can't use an nd filter here, because you also want to have the shadows in one bracket.
CarlTN said:or going from 1/180 sync to 1/200...
My main issue with the slow x-sync is not the difference to 1/200s, but that you have to set 1/2ev exposure level increments to get it (or it's 1/160s) - but that *also* means you can only set 1/2ev flash ec steps, which are far too large steps for ettl metering :-(
I didn't succeed yet to force 1/180s on the 6d in 1/3ev more through Magic Lantern because the canon fw forces it to 1/2ev steps... the only way to combine max. x-sync with the smaller steps is in Av mode with a fixed 1/180s shutter speed (in the flash menu).
CarlTN said:or an extra 50k shutter cycles 5 years from now (pretty sure I will have sold my own 6D before it even hits 30 or 40k cycles...let alone 100k...my 50D only had 25k cycles in 4 years.
Oh my, I'm at nearly 10k after one month (I shoot a lot of fluffy things that move around), I really hope the 6d shutter is sturdier than what the spec indicates, my 100k rated 60d is still fine @150k cycles :-o
Marsu42 said:My main issue with the slow x-sync is not the difference to 1/200s, but that you have to set 1/2ev exposure level increments to get it (or it's 1/160s) - but that *also* means you can only set 1/2ev flash ec steps, which are far too large steps for ettl metering :-(
I didn't succeed yet to force 1/180s on the 6d in 1/3ev more through Magic Lantern because the canon fw forces it to 1/2ev steps... the only way to combine max. x-sync with the smaller steps is in Av mode with a fixed 1/180s shutter speed (in the flash menu).
pensive tomato said:Am I missing your point here?
pensive tomato said:Marsu42 said:My main issue with the slow x-sync is not the difference to 1/200s, but that you have to set 1/2ev exposure level increments to get it (or it's 1/160s) - but that *also* means you can only set 1/2ev flash ec steps, which are far too large steps for ettl metering :-(
I didn't succeed yet to force 1/180s on the 6d in 1/3ev more through Magic Lantern because the canon fw forces it to 1/2ev steps... the only way to combine max. x-sync with the smaller steps is in Av mode with a fixed 1/180s shutter speed (in the flash menu).
I'm curious about what you're describing here. I have my 6D set to 1/3-stop increments. Shooting in M with a speedlite, I can adjust my shutter speed and aperture in thirds up to 1/180 s (of course, no HSS involved). So it goes from 1/160-s to 1/180-s, in a 1/6-stop increment, but otherwise it's 1/3 of a stop, as in from 1/125-s to 1/160-s. I use E-TTL, and I can also keep doing 1/3-stop FEC adjustments without a problem.
Am I missing your point here? Basically I don't understand what you mean about being forced to work on 1/2 increments (which I agree it's limiting).
I'm not commenting on the shelf life of the 6D. For my use as a hobbyist, I hope that I'll be replacing the camera before it dies. I'm honestly curious to know what is the limitation you're pointing out.