gekko said:haggie said:gekko said:zim said:Just the one in the middle, doesn't really count as 'linked'![]()
All AF points can be used for that if you set the correct metering mode, both according to the user manual and my testing. I use it all the time while photographing birds.
gekko, can you tell me where in the Manual this is described for random AF-points?
Have a look in the table at the bottom of page 203.
gekko said:Not much to it: use Evaluative Metering + AI Servo and shoot as you normally would. The camera will set the exposure based on the focus points in use. Keeping the shutter button half pressed and tracking your target keeps the exposure updated as the focus points change. No need to use AE Lock.
Remove the low-pass filter. The 5DSR gives so much sharper images cropped to the same size. That and improved AF would be enough for me to upgrade.
gekko said:Not much to it: use Evaluative Metering + AI Servo and shoot as you normally would. The camera will set the exposure based on the focus points in use. Keeping the shutter button half pressed and tracking your target keeps the exposure updated as the focus points change. No need to use AE Lock.
jdavidse said:Here's a thought experiment about flip screens. How would a flip-out screen fit on the 7DIII, if implemented? I see the challenge not just in the weathersealing/durability as Canon have always claimed, but in the displacement of no less than 5 buttons on the left hand side. They could make the screen up/down tilt only, such as the Nikon D850.
I think they would have to either rearrange the buttons to be more like the 6D (and killing the control continuity with the 5D line) Or they would need to create a VERY thin bezel on the flippy screen, and put the buttons above and below the hinge mechanism on the left. I also see space to move the trash button below the dial.
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tomscott said:The only buttons that I use on the left are the zoom, playback and trash button. Having a dedicated rate button, direct print button are just wasted imo...
jdavidse said:Here's a thought experiment about flip screens. How would a flip-out screen fit on the 7DIII, if implemented? I see the challenge not just in the weathersealing/durability as Canon have always claimed, but in the displacement of no less than 5 buttons on the left hand side. They could make the screen up/down tilt only, such as the Nikon D850.
I think they would have to either rearrange the buttons to be more like the 6D (and killing the control continuity with the 5D line) Or they would need to create a VERY thin bezel on the flippy screen, and put the buttons above and below the hinge mechanism on the left. I also see space to move the trash button below the dial.
unfocused said:I strongly suspect that Canon has surveyed photographers and found that most pros will say "don't mess with my buttons" as people who use their cameras daily are creatures of habit and don't take kindly to having the cheese moved around.
tr573 said:gekko said:Not much to it: use Evaluative Metering + AI Servo and shoot as you normally would. The camera will set the exposure based on the focus points in use. Keeping the shutter button half pressed and tracking your target keeps the exposure updated as the focus points change. No need to use AE Lock.
Biasing the multi zone meter to the active focus point, is not the same thing as spot metering off the active focus point. What you're describing instructs the multi zone metering algorithm (evaluative in Canon's case) to give extra weight to what you've told it is the subject.
Spot metering means "give me a reading to make whatever is under this area my neutral gray tone"
Personally I don't get the fascination people have with that feature, but still, not the same.
gekko said:Could very well be that you are correct.
When testing on high contrast targets (light/dark) and single AF point, panning the focus point from f.ex dark to bright, the exposure does not change until the focus point hits the bright part. ...
It really doesn't matter what you call it, it behaves just like I want it to, giving me the exposure of the active focus point(s).![]()
ronaldbyram said:For Me:
1. Larger buffer. I shoot Raw and hate to switch to Jpeg to keep up with action.
2. Improved ***. Current *** takes some time to lock in.
3. Removal of AA filter
4. Faster Memory Card support.
5. Tilt screen.
6. Touch Screen
Orangutan said:I totally don't get the anti-AA filter fetish -- I'd much rather have microscopic softness than moiré. Unacceptable softness is much more likely to be caused by poor AF or DoF than the AA filter. For landscape I can almost see removing the AA filter because AF and DoF error can usually be removed by proper technique; even there, though, unless you're printing YUGE you're not going to notice slight softness on 20+ MP images. And, BTW, the 7D-series is marketed more for action than landscape
As an aside, I'd love to see side-by-side shots of 5DS and 5DSr of the same scene for comparison.
jdavidse said:Here's a thought experiment about flip screens. How would a flip-out screen fit on the 7DIII, if implemented? I see the challenge not just in the weathersealing/durability as Canon have always claimed, but in the displacement of no less than 5 buttons on the left hand side. They could make the screen up/down tilt only, such as the Nikon D850.
I think they would have to either rearrange the buttons to be more like the 6D (and killing the control continuity with the 5D line) Or they would need to create a VERY thin bezel on the flippy screen, and put the buttons above and below the hinge mechanism on the left. I also see space to move the trash button below the dial.
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lalachill said:jdavidse said:Here's a thought experiment about flip screens. How would a flip-out screen fit on the 7DIII, if implemented? I see the challenge not just in the weathersealing/durability as Canon have always claimed, but in the displacement of no less than 5 buttons on the left hand side. They could make the screen up/down tilt only, such as the Nikon D850.
I think they would have to either rearrange the buttons to be more like the 6D (and killing the control continuity with the 5D line) Or they would need to create a VERY thin bezel on the flippy screen, and put the buttons above and below the hinge mechanism on the left. I also see space to move the trash button below the dial.
I think the can put the 5 buttons part of the interface that you will see in the tilt screen. The dimension will remain more or less the same. But users will not have the feel of the button anymore instead get used to the touch screen.![]()