I see it's even worse, and at 25Mp. But I'm sticking with Canon. I can "get by" with my R5 until the next generation. But I can see how faster FPS is appealing to a niche.Have you seen the Sony a9III? Asking for a friend.
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I see it's even worse, and at 25Mp. But I'm sticking with Canon. I can "get by" with my R5 until the next generation. But I can see how faster FPS is appealing to a niche.Have you seen the Sony a9III? Asking for a friend.
It's not only about fps. The faster readout speed allows 14-bit readout with electronic shutter, and electronic shutter allows faster shutter speeds (e.g., negates the need for an ND filter for sunlit portraits with fast lenses), allows silent shooting (important in some venues), and the faster readout also allows better sampling for improved AF tracking.I see it's even worse, and at 25Mp. But I'm sticking with Canon. I can "get by" with my R5 until the next generation. But I can see how faster FPS is appealing to a niche.
Because, again, they sacrificed some 0.5 stops of dynamic range for faster rolling shutter. Was it worth it? Depends on your use case.
Next gen, thank you. 2024 and going the wrong direction with noise?
I'm referring to NOISE, not dynamic range.Because, again, they sacrificed some 0.5 stops of dynamic range for faster rolling shutter. Was it worth it? Depends on your use case.
In answer to some of the above points and including the condescending ones - my observation that the R7 with telephoto lenses is mainly used for action and wildlife/birding is because that is the only use I have seen whilst travelling about and seeing people with this combination. As for the lenses, they are are well catered for and I haven't said otherwise. The problems with the R7 are with rolling shutter due to slow sensor read, noisy mechanical shutter with slap and shortcomings with AF especially subject tracking. I know these for a fact because I also have an R8 which does track well. There are so many posts on forums confirming these shortcomings. Furthermore it was billed as a wildlife/birding camera being its strengths. I don't know why people have to start going on about Nikon or Fuji when I just want Canon to put these things right to make it an excellent APSC camera in this genre!you are literally complaining about pixels on target when Canon has a 32MP APS-C prosumer camera and Nikon has nothing over 20.9mp. that's the only reason you'd go APS-C - also if you are complaining about the Canon RF not matching any DSLR - why not stick to DSLR's? Do you have a similar complaint for Nikon that only has a Z 50 consumer grade APS-C camera?
how does an R7 not work "properly" for wildlife when it's 15fps / 30 fps with autofocus and animal priority AF? no matter how good that D500 was, it's not as good as a modern mirrorless with subject recognition, frame rate. and oh yeah 32MP sensor (which is 25% more reach on per pixels on target than a D500)
there's only one company out there that has a prosumer grade APS-C camera outside of Canon, and that is Fuji.
and ps - a 100mp sensor in crop mode would be what you want, as long as it provided a high speed crop facility.
The two are related. But regardless, yes it's just horrible that now when you use the R5II with electronic shutter, the read noise is as terribly high as the Nikon Z8/Z9. Not sure how people using these cameras sleep at night.I'm referring to NOISE, not dynamic range.
You work your way around the problems of any camera to use its strengths and avoid its weaknesses. I use the R7, R5ii and formerly the R5 for wildlife and birding. With the R7 for birds, dragonflies in flight etc, I use EFCS or mechanical shutter at high shutter speeds where shutter slap is irrelevant and there is no rolling shutter. For static wildlife, I use ES where there are usually no problems of rolling shutter. If those making "so many posts" use the R7 with ES for fast movement or panning, and with mechanical shutter at low shutter speeds where slap can come in, then they should reflect upon themselves for not learning how to use the camera rather than blaming the camera.In answer to some of the above points and including the condescending ones - my observation that the R7 with telephoto lenses is mainly used for action and wildlife/birding is because that is the only use I have seen whilst travelling about and seeing people with this combination. As for the lenses, they are are well catered for and I haven't said otherwise. The problems with the R7 are with rolling shutter due to slow sensor read, noisy mechanical shutter with slap and shortcomings with AF especially subject tracking. I know these for a fact because I also have an R8 which does track well. There are so many posts on forums confirming these shortcomings. Furthermore it was billed as a wildlife/birding camera being its strengths. I don't know why people have to start going on about Nikon or Fuji when I just want Canon to put these things right to make it an excellent APSC camera in this genre!
As I said before, I'm sticking with Canon. Why do you reflexively point to other brands when Canon is being critiqued?The two are related. But regardless, yes it's just horrible that now when you use the R5II with electronic shutter, the read noise is as terribly high as the Nikon Z8/Z9. Not sure how people using these cameras sleep at night.
Obviously your decision. I've never understood any decision being made on the basis of a <0.5-stop difference in any sensor parameter. Even with lenses, people complain about f/6.3 being too slow (for example) but are fine with 400mm f/5.6. Mmmkay.As I said before, I'm sticking with Canon. Why do you reflexively point to other brands when Canon is being critiqued?
The noise issue, trivial or otherwise, affects my upgrade decision. I understand that for photographers who work mostly in great to good light, or who rarely lift shadows, higher ISO noise is not a big issue when deciding to purchase.
Dynamic range is derived from noise, so it's basically the same in this context.I'm referring to NOISE, not dynamic range.
Well if you trust photonstophotos, the difference at high ISOs is 0.10-0.15 stops. That's not much at a first glance isn't it?More importantly, you seem unaware that the differences (modest as they are) between the R5 and R5II noise and DR are at low ISO. You reference high ISO noise, above ISO 800 there is very little difference, if any, between the two sensors.
I've combined melatonin with Ilford Delta 3200 successfullyThe two are related. But regardless, yes it's just horrible that now when you use the R5II with electronic shutter, the read noise is as terribly high as the Nikon Z8/Z9. Not sure how people using these cameras sleep at night.
In answer to some of the above points and including the condescending ones - my observation that the R7 with telephoto lenses is mainly used for action and wildlife/birding is because that is the only use I have seen whilst travelling about and seeing people with this combination. As for the lenses, they are are well catered for and I haven't said otherwise. The problems with the R7 are with rolling shutter due to slow sensor read, noisy mechanical shutter with slap and shortcomings with AF especially subject tracking. I know these for a fact because I also have an R8 which does track well. There are so many posts on forums confirming these shortcomings. Furthermore it was billed as a wildlife/birding camera being its strengths. I don't know why people have to start going on about Nikon or Fuji when I just want Canon to put these things right to make it an excellent APSC camera in this genre!
It seemed like lot of people were freaking out about no rf-s, so I can understand why Canon took this approach.The R7 will be addressed in 2025. As with the launch of the full frame EOS R system, APS-C R bodies were brought to market as quickly as they could. As with the EOS R & RP, and for lack of a better term, they are "parts bin" cameras. As much as I don't like the R7, it has aged pretty well when compared to the rest of the APS-C ILC world.
Canon needed time to develop and manufacture their new generation of sensors. They were 5 years behind.
There is also finding out what the market actually is for APS-C cameras in the mirrorless world and adjust accordingly. Full frame camera bodies along with L lenses are where the margins are, the APS-C line is about volume.
Give them a second!
The reality is that in modern sensors,
the pixel size doesn't have a strong correlation with the dynamic range..
Do you know the details of the video processing chain in Canon cameras? You think there's no processing just because it's called 'raw'?
@Quarkcharmed is not wrong. Here is the dynamic range vs iso for the Canon R3 and R5, and Sony A9 A1, and R5, spanning 24-45-50-60 Mpx, taken from photons to photons https://www.photonstophotos.net/Charts/PDR.htm#Canon EOS R3,Canon EOS R5,Sony ILCE-1,Sony ILCE-7RM5,Sony ILCE-9
I sincerely hope so, because perseverating on your flawed reasoning isn’t working.Last attempt:
@Quarkcharmed is not wrong. Here is the dynamic range vs iso
So that was just more misinformation. Thanks for confirming.Last attempt:
Keep on measurebating your pixel while the rest of us look at pictures.
Bye.