... and Design of R5. Current design of the R7 is a disappointment, as was the R too. Why all that? Ergonomics of the R5 and R6 is ideal. Never change working system! By the way, that should be called R90 and not R7. Too bad I won't buy this camera.
I think we'll see an R5 Mark II and R6 Mark II sooner rather than later. The R and RP will possibly be discontinued, we'll probably see the R5 and R6 Mark 1 remain in production and moved to a lower price point, with the R6 Mark 1 being priced competitively as an RP replacement.
With modern photography becoming increasingly reliant on computational power, the need for regular upgrades with faster CPUs, more internal RAM, etc, is likely to move to a faster refresh cycle than the traditional 3-4 year cycle for DSLRs.
I think they'll also follow Sony's trick and keep the Mark 1 R5 and R6 in production simultaneously for a long time. No point in developing new lower-cost cameras when you already have a production line set up for an existing model. Maybe the R and RP will struggle on even longer if they can't get the R5 and R6 down to a low enough unit cost.
These 2 crop cameras are just redundant
I disagree with almost all of this.I think we'll see an R5 Mark II and R6 Mark II sooner rather than later. The R and RP will possibly be discontinued, we'll probably see the R5 and R6 Mark 1 remain in production and moved to a lower price point, with the R6 Mark 1 being priced competitively as an RP replacement.
With modern photography becoming increasingly reliant on computational power, the need for regular upgrades with faster CPUs, more internal RAM, etc, is likely to move to a faster refresh cycle than the traditional 3-4 year cycle for DSLRs.
I think they'll also follow Sony's trick and keep the Mark 1 R5 and R6 in production simultaneously for a long time. No point in developing new lower-cost cameras when you already have a production line set up for an existing model. Maybe the R and RP will struggle on even longer if they can't get the R5 and R6 down to a low enough unit cost.
Well, since your avatar says you have switched to medium format, you probably were never in the target audience anyway.... and Design of R5. Current design of the R7 is a disappointment, as was the R too. Why all that? Ergonomics of the R5 and R6 is ideal. Never change working system! By the way, that should be called R90 and not R7. Too bad I won't buy this camera.
NooBy the time the R1 arrives, it will be another step further behind the competition's flagships...
I'd be very surprised if manufacturing cost is very relevant at all to Canon's asking price for an R5. For an item like that, any manufacturer wants to be pricing on demand, not cost.But the R5 won't simply become cheaper to manufacture just because Canon will release an updated model.
And whenever I see a goose, I look under it for a golden egg.Would love to see a camera that is rough and ready for all kinds of conditions but isn't going to cost a fortune.
R7 II ?.... with higherend body, BSI sensor without rolling shutter etc... please!
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I always saw the R and RP as temporary fixes (based on old sensors and specs from the 5D IV and 6D2). It makes sense to me for newly designed lower-priced FF bodies to soon be introduced to take over the price points the R and RP filled. There were multiple rumours last year of >1 new FF body coming, and maybe supply-chain issues have delayed them.I could see substantial rebates offered on the R and RP to bring down the cost of entry into the full frame system. It is plausible that they would do that rather than introduce new budget models as a temporary strategy.
You are correct that new model don't make existing models cheaper except for:As @blackcoffee17 said, cameras don't become cheaper to manufacture when a new model is released.
I don't have a view about whether Canon is likely to start keeping older models on sale after a newer version is released (although as you say, Canon hasn't been in the habit of doing that), and I don't expect to see an R6 for an RP price any time soon. However, there are a couple of points in your post where I disagree (FWIW!I disagree with almost all of this.
Has Canon ever kept an older version in the lineup once a newer version is released? Maybe on Rebels and they may have done that with the XX series for a limited time, but not on X series cameras.
As @blackcoffee17 said, cameras don't become cheaper to manufacture when a new model is released.
There is no way Canon will reduce the price of the R6 to RP territory.
Update cycles aren't driven by technology, they are driven by revenue strategies. In a shrinking market one can argue that refresh cycles might get longer, not shorter, to give Canon more time to recover costs.
I could see substantial rebates offered on the R and RP to bring down the cost of entry into the full frame system. It is plausible that they would do that rather than introduce new budget models as a temporary strategy.
I don't think anything you said conflicts with my comments. I certainly agree that actual manufacturing costs are a small factor in pricing decisions.I don't have a view about whether Canon is likely to start keeping older models on sale after a newer version is released (although as you say, Canon hasn't been in the habit of doing that), and I don't expect to see an R6 for an RP price any time soon. However, there are a couple of points in your post where I disagree (FWIW!).
First, I would be very surprised if camera gear, at least anything above the very cheapest entry level models, are priced on cost. I am confident they are priced primarily on demand, ie what will the market pay. So I doubt the fact that cameras don't beceome cheaper to manufacture just because a new model is released is particulary important in itself. Canon is simply trying to sell camera gear for as much money as it can, so ideally it will push consumers towards higher profit models (generally, higher end and/or newer models, I expect). If you assume a new model will command a price premium and hence will be more profitable, keeping an old model around may not be a good idea (assuming a sale is less profitable) if it means too many buyers opt for the old one. Equally though, assuming the newer model really is better than the old one and if the cameras can be in two different price classes (eg what Sony has done with the A7IV relative to the A7III), keeping the old model on the market at a relatively low price may make a lot of sense to target different groups of buyers without going to the trouble of developing another model.
Second, I think it is a fallacy to think Canon needs or necessarily wants to recover the costs of a model before introducing a new model. Canon wants to sell camera gear as profitably as it can. If that means retiring a model and replacing it, so be it. (The statements you so often see on the internet where someone claims Canon (or some other manufacturer) is not doing something because they don't want to cannibalise sales of their other products drive me crazy. Yes, manufacturer's engage in product differentiation to try to increase their overall profitability, but primarily a manufacturer cares that you buy one of its products rather than someone else's product, and whether you buy the manufacturer's product X or product Y is much less significant. Further, I expect many costs are shared across multiple models to some degree or another, so I doubt it is easy to allocate all costs to a model specifically in any event. For example, I am sure a lot of R&D goes into AF systems and the AF system which ends up in a particular cameras is both an evolution of the AF system in earlier cameras and part of the development process which will lead to the AF system in future cameras. I think you can see that quite clearly in the mirrorless era, where newer model cameras (eg Canon R7, Sony A7IV) inherit AF systems similar to those in much higher end cameras (eg Canon R3, Sony A1). AF functions such as eye-tracking are heavily software dependent, so (I expect) it is cheaper for a manufacturer to have one code base and deploy it in all cameras, rather than developing separate sofware just because cameras are in different classes in other respects. And, of course, that doesn't mean the lower end cameras will necessarily have the same AF performance as a higher end camera, given that inevitably there will be hardware differences. As someone else (Neuro, I think from memory) has pointed out in a recent post on CR, the R3 has a sensor with a higher readout speed than the sensor in an R7, which allows the R3's AF system to receive information more quickly, which at least theoretically should allow the R3's AF system to perform better than the AF system on an R7, despite other similarities between the AF systems on the two cameras.