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I'm stoked on the grip! It's always nice to see some of the patent discoveries turn into real products.The Canon EOS R5 Mark II is now in the hands of people outside of the closed testing circle of Canon.
We have now seen some images of the camera, but cannot post them in any way shape or form. This is standard practice for us, but I'm sure other sites will be posting images in the near future. Or we will get permission to do so.
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Why? Does it seem likely that many users will switch systems? Forum participants don't represent the real world...people here seem to believe that Canon must entice Sony users to buy Canon cameras or Canon users to not buy Sony cameras. The reality is more likely that Canon needs to entice Canon users to buy new Canon cameras instead of just hanging on to the Canon cameras they have.The R5II will have to sell at a significant discount to the A1II if it is going to only match the A1 in most of the fundamental features.
Nor the Hass X2D - a £7,400 cameraWell, the EOS 5D cost $5299 in today dollars.
Yes, I do realise the value of that statement.
The Leica M11 doesn't have video (or really anything else)!
the video portions are heavily used by stills.I appreciate that there are video users who will love all the updates. But for stills-only shooters, they only add cost, weight, and complexity. For both video shooters AND stills shooters, it would have been nice to have two separate, more purpose-focused cameras.
What about the internal ND filter patent for "an R5 series camera" though? Will this patent also be implemented in the R5 Mark II or will we "only" see the active cooling grip. And would that mean that certain video features like for example 8K60p or 4KHQ (oversampled full sensor readout 4K) with 60 or 120fps will only be available with the active cooling grip attached or will this grip only give us MORE recording time in these modes (8K60p, 4KHQ120p)?I'm stoked on the grip! It's always nice to see some of the patent discoveries turn into real products.
And if it does, will it also feature a compass to record the shooting direction?And I'd love to know if the R5 Mark II will feature BUILT-IN GPS
Well I'd sure hope Canon can one up what will be a 3.5 year old camera when the R5II finally ships. But what will happen in Nov 2024 when the A1II comes out? 50MP @ 60FPS with flawless pre-capture implementation and who knows what other goodies Sony will have cooked up by then?
The R5II will have to sell at a significant discount to the A1II if it is going to only match the A1 in most of the fundamental features.
Do you know if the R5 Mark II will have a higher dynamic range than that of the R5 (14.6 EV) in stills?the video portions are heavily used by stills.
how do you get your extremely fast low blackout EVF?
the only difference between video and stills is the fact that the shutter never closes on video and takes an singular image, otherwise, for video you are simply recording the camera's video feed that must be there anyway.
overheating and better thermal management have a huge impact on stills performance as well.
anything they can improve for some of the core areas like this will certainly improve your stills experience. just won't be as noticeable.
What about the internal ND filter patent for "an R5 series camera" though? Will this patent also be implemented in the R5 Mark II or will we "only" see the active cooling grip. And would that mean that certain video features like for example 8K60p or 4KHQ (oversampled full sensor readout 4K) with 60 or 120fps will only be available with the active cooling grip attached or will this grip only give us MORE recording time in these modes (8K60p, 4KHQ120p)?
And I'd love to know if the R5 Mark II will feature BUILT-IN GPS
Thank you very much in advance!
even after the announcement, we won't know the DR until photonstophotos gets the images and does his math.Do you know if the R5 Mark II will have a higher dynamic range than that of the R5 (14.6 EV) in stills?
And will there be an option to shoot 16-bit RAW with the R5 Mark II?
Makes sense. I do wonder if that means that BUILT-IN GPS will also NOT be implemented as this would also take up some space.it's really hard to say - alot of Canon's designs come down to size and weight.
You wouldn't believe the level of agonizing over both that Canon does in the patent applications. I would imagine that whatever cooling solution they did would add some weight and size to the body - so it may be difficult to get an ND in there.
I fear that this active cooling grip is an indication that certain video features like for example 8K60p or 4KHQ (oversampled full sensor readout 4K) with 60fps or 120fps (maybe we'll even get 4K180p?!) will only be available with the "active cooling grip" attached. Or will this grip only give us MORE recording time in these modes (8K60p, 4KHQ120p, 4K180p)?I'm stoked on the grip! It's always nice to see some of the patent discoveries turn into real products.
how did you like the dual OS on the R5C?This is very exciting. Especially the cooling solutions!!!
There are a some video centric things from R5C I would love to see in the R5
1. Shutter Angle options
2. Tooling. False Colors. Advanced Wave Forms, HDMI options for these
3. The R5c has a bit better dynamic range and better noise patterns in the shadows than the R5 so hopefully this is better the R5II as well. Some of this I think was due to the Cinema line's OS/Code.
4. Cinema Raw Codecs. I like these a lot better than I did the Canon Raw and Raw LT in the R5
5. I think the R5C had better highlight rolloff than the the R5 again probably due to algorithms in the cinema os. So I hope this comes over in some way to the R5II.
6. Obviously IBIS will be in the R5II so my question is will you be able to lock off IBIS in some way to make rougher filming scenarios more viable than the R5. R5C of course did not have IBIS.
7. Anamorphic Desqueeze Options in Camera.
Also, 12BIT Raw Output would be nice.
Hopefully some this info will come.
I fear that this active cooling grip is an indication that certain video features like for example 8K60p or 4KHQ (oversampled full sensor readout 4K) with 60fps or 120fps (maybe there will even be 4K180p?!) will only be available with the active cooling grip attached. Or will this grip only give us MORE recording time in these modes (8K60p, 4KHQ120p, 4K180p)?
What do you think?
Canon has clearly decided that video rules the market now. see also, the Z-series RF lenses. This is an R5Cii.
But for stills shooters, the original R5 is a great deal at $2900!