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Thpriest reacted to a post in a topic: Canon USA drops new teaser (FX30 competitor?)
- Today
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The rumors seem to be sure that it's full-frame, 33MP, has an Open Gate, and has RAW. It's funny that there was a short circuit between the rumor sites. Andrea Pizzini's sites got the information first, and the Canon Rumors site had to play catch-up. All the info on a Canon camera was on the Sony rumors site. The Canon rumors site seems like Pravda, a direct mouthpiece for Canon (who isn't today?)
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Mine records 6K with no limits. I think you have to change the thermal management settings to access it. I've had 2 S5mk2s filming a 50 min podcast in 6K with no problem (interior).
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2 years ago, I had the S1H with the battery grip and the Leica 24-90mm f2.8/4 as my principal camera. That combo weighed almost 3k and not only was that a big lump to heft about in the hand on a 12+ hour day, it could not go on a camera strap as that would have been shoulder destruction and too heavy to hang off a Spider Holster all day as even with the tightest belt... Plus any momentum and that thing banging on your thigh left bruising! In the end, I used a sturdy Holdfast leather harness AND a Spider Holster to handle it when not in hand. Compare that with my S9 + Sigma 28-70mm f2.8 at not much over 1kg and less than 2kg including freestanding monopod and what a difference! My pair of S1RII's with lenses and mic etc weigh less TOGETHER than that lump above and are far more capable. In fact, both S1RII's and the S9 which now has the 50mm f1.8 on it, all 3 together weigh approx the same as 'The Lump'! It makes a HUGE difference when working and how you feel after. I do think there is very much a Goldilocks Factor when it comes to this kind of thing and some stuff is just too big and awkward and some stuff just too small and fiddly. I feel what I have right now is that middle option that works best.
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Make yer bed and lie in it man! But seriously, this was always going to happen. Lumix has been on a roll in 2025, but Canon and Nikon were of course cooking something up in the background just as Sony is and sure as night follows day, today's news is tomorrow's fish & chips wrapper. Except the tools of course do not instantly become junk. I made my own decision knowing that it was almost certain no matter what Canon did, I'd never go there but Sony or Nikon could have been a very valid option. Not quite as they were or are, - too many 'missing' elements for me with Nikon, but the most likely to resolve those, possibly/probably with the ZR, - we will find out. Sony would have been the most likely as things stood a few months back, having 3 great lenses and I could have made an all FX-30 line up work. So personally, intrigued/interested in what will come and I may have some envious eyes in some regards, but I really do need stability myself now in this department after spending years of chasing the holy grail of one man band full hybrid capability. Will other kit surpass what I have? For sure... Maybe not this year but certainly by next year and no question by 2027, but my primary focus is now firmly on the creative side. It always was, but was constantly distracted and hampered by kit and logistics and now that has been removed... But for anyone already with at least a foot in the Canon camp, of course it makes sense!
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Yes, 100% Tokina made and these lenses predate the Kino and Komine partnerships. Vivitar lenses have a serial number system that will tell you which original manufacturer made the lens normally but these older 60’s preset versions predate that serial number system. I’ve researched them quite a bit over the years however and found information confirming Tokina. My 35mm is doing great and solid, maybe you got one that was not very well taken care of?
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Man I might have to pause jumping all in on Lumix with this one, especially if there is also APSC version coming soon. C50 and maybe C30 (APSC version) will make my R5C and V1 more complete
- Yesterday
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eatstoomuchjam reacted to a post in a topic: Canon USA drops new teaser (FX30 competitor?)
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eatstoomuchjam reacted to a post in a topic: Canon USA drops new teaser (FX30 competitor?)
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eatstoomuchjam reacted to a post in a topic: Canon USA drops new teaser (FX30 competitor?)
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The signs of growing old 😂 Totally feel you on that! Back then I was rocking C70 with 18-35mm 1.8 on gimball all day. Now with S9 + 28-70+ RS3 mini it is lighter than C70 + 18-35 alone.
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ntblowz reacted to a post in a topic: Canon USA drops new teaser (FX30 competitor?)
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You can extract pure Copium element under SAR comment section. How these people forget Canon owns 50% of the market? Of course they can and will make competitive camera.
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"Why I jumped to Canon" What a time to be alive!
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Davide DB reacted to a post in a topic: Canon USA drops new teaser (FX30 competitor?)
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Davide DB reacted to a post in a topic: Canon USA drops new teaser (FX30 competitor?)
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Django reacted to a post in a topic: Canon USA drops new teaser (FX30 competitor?)
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Cue all those who recently made, ‘Why I moved to Lumix’ pieces on YouRube gushing over the S1II, scrabbling for a piece of the Canon pie. Or Nikon pie. There’s 24 hours between the two so plenty of time to choose which ship to jump to next.
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I was considering pulling the trigger on a used R50V (actually being sold by the guy who does the Camera Conspiracies channel) all weekend long - then I seen the Canon USA post on IG. If it is indeed a C50 then I believe it would be the final cam I need to complete my A/B/C trifecta and ride out into the sunset.
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Ty Harper reacted to a post in a topic: Canon USA drops new teaser (FX30 competitor?)
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Sony rumors claim from a "rock-solid" source it's the C50, a full frame FX3 killer with R5ii sensor. If true that would basically be the R5C mk2 in an FX type body. Also Nikon is supposed to drop Nikon ZR the following day. What a time to be alive!
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Ty Harper started following Canon USA drops new teaser (FX30 competitor?)
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Sept 9th premiere launch date. https://www.instagram.com/reel/DOD3vIsDRuK/?igsh=MW1xc2cxcTMyanM3bw==
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Tamron joining would be my preference, but I suspect they are too close to Sony? But they have some really great zoom lenses especially... Their 28-75mm f2.8 is arguably pretty comparable with the Sigma 28-70mm f2.8 (just moved mine to back up/static shorter option where the 70-200 is a bit much) but there is nothing within L Mount like Tamron's 70-180mm f2.8. That latter lens is much more compact and lighter than anything else available at that aperture with that focal range. Lumix's and Sigma's 70-200 may be 20mm longer, but they are fooking mahoosive in comparison. Handheld, I don't think I could go back to anything over 750g now and preferably under 500g. I tried the Sigma 28-45mm f1.8 and thought the image quality was superb, but the reality of it was a negative and real world, what can it do that the <300g Lumix 35mm f1.8 cannot? I never say never however and if they ever produced a longer focal length, internal focus, ie, non-extending sibling to the Sigma 28-45mm f1.8 such as 45-90mm f1.8, I might be interested...but I'd realistically then need a battery grip for each S1RII and in each hand, I'd go from 1278g per unit (body, battery, cards, Swiss area plate, Spider Holster thingy, MKE 200 mic, mic cable, VND) to more like +1000g per unit...which is a whole other thing and exactly what I have worked towards getting away from!
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Now confirmed officially by Leica. https://leica-camera.com/en-GB/press/viltrox-joins-l-mount-alliance I was hopeful that Viltrox getting involved would bring a Nikon F to L Mount adapter with AF as they would now have both ends of the puzzle but then you remember that Leica are the gatekeepers of the alliance so I suspect not. Let’s hope Viltrox are a bit more committed to making a go of it now they’ve been accepted than Samyang who started with a bang with the 35-150 after they joined but have released fuck all since in L mount.
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eatstoomuchjam reacted to a post in a topic: Pana S9 is definition of an underrated camera
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Yes. Some of their full-frame 'Air' lens range look quite interesting and by interesting, I mean compact, lightweight a relatively fast. But I'm very happy personally with Lumix's own f1.8 line which are not that much bigger or heavier... I have the 50mm f1.8 pretty much welded now to my S9, which now that 2 identical S1Rii's are in the stable, has been 'relegated' to; lightweight static 'second angle' capture for stuff such as ceremonies & speeches (as long as it's not too hot and not running for too long), plus 'gimbal mode' (with full E stab on, providing you don't try and turn corners, it's not too far off). The 18 for extreme (for me anyway) stuff which is hardly ever, but 35mm and 85mm, one on each hip, now being my principal hybrid units on the S1RII's. Single S5II with battery grip still doing the long form static stuff where overheating might be a risk, or battery running out. I do wish that 6k wasn't limited to 30 mins though. Not because I 'need' to shoot ceremonies or speeches in 6k, because I deliver those to the client in 1080 still, but more because I like to use some of that footage in their wedding highlights film and it's more compatible using 6k mixed into 7.2k capture than it is the 4k that I use, but hey ho... Zero gripes with the entire system now... Yes, the AF could be better still and is not Sony level. Probably not quite Nikon and no experience of Canon so cannot comment but I suspect still better than Fuji. Yes, the body design of the S1RII and S1II could have been more 'interesting', - personally I'd rather have seen something more FX3/30 like, but they are very S1H-lite so OK. And the S9 would be better with a mech shutter and if they do ever make a Series II, it needs that and a bit of weather sealing would not go amiss and even a micro SD as a second slot like the Zf, would be welcome. As above, no 'complaints', just a couple of observations.
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Today might be an interesting day as apparently in a few hours time Viltrox will be announcing that they have now officially joined the L Mount Alliance. Good news for L mount owners in general but particularly so for those with an S9 as some more size appropriate (and low price) primes should become available.
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Thanks for sharing. Are you sure these were made by Tokina and not Kino Precision? I bought that same 35mm f2.8 a few years ago. Within an hour of using it, the helicoid started to have some play in it. A few minutes later, the lens literally came apart in my hands (from completely normal use with my hands, no follow focus). I wasn't able to reassemble it. I think I've probably owned over 100 lenses at this point, and this was the first and only time this has ever happened to me. I hope yours are holding up better than mine did.
- Last week
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They are also really, really cheap. I think I paid $35 for the 135mm and $45 for the 35mm. The 85mm 1.8 is a rare one that is fast for a 60’s era lens and i use it to match with other similar era lens sets that never got a fast 85mm. Got that one for $150 so it was a score. There’s even a super rare 135mm f/1.5 “Vivitar Professional” In the set but pretty soft and overpriced, ($2,500) these days. The 135mm f/3.5 is super tiny. (pic 2)
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Not as easy to find, but the Vivitar Preset lenses made by tokina in the 60’s are pretty sweet. Single coated and have circular aperture blades with smooth movement which work out well for filmmaking. As I mentioned before, stoped down to f/3.5 is fine to keep round bokeh on these but you still have f/2.8 as needed. Soft and dreamlike with great out of focus areas. Bodies are small and light and quite well built. Threaded T mount so easily adaptable to M42 or other modern mounts. I have the 28mm 2.5 (pyramid) 35mm 2.8 85mm 1.8 (rare) 135mm 3.5 and 2.8 200mm 3.5
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Yeah, i did ok without it on the shoot but was worried the whole time. There’s no off the shelf solution but I took a chance on the smallrig clamp designed for Sony Cameras and got that one the other day. Worked out and it fits perfectly. Blocks the USB-C but i use a dummy battery anyway.
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Yes, this is how HSS works. I'm not sure why you're describing it to me. I already acknowledged that some people are opposed to it. I also have some not-especially-expensive Godox/Flashpoint strobes that I've used to HSS in direct sunlight before with relatively wide apertures. They're about the size of an extended soda can. It seems like you read about 30% of what I write and and then respond to that instead of reading and understanding fully. I will repeat for you that the 100MP sensor that is used in this camera and the GFX is simply incapable of reading out 100 megapixels 24 times per second. It doesn't matter of Hasselblad want to try cooling it for that or not. It's just not an option. Otherwise, arguments against rolling shutter or alternative sensor readouts are silly. Many vendors do it and many people use their cameras successfully without complaint. And Hasselblad haven't had a reputation for the highest image quality in a long time. That crown went to companies like Phase One years ago. Once again, try reading every word that I say before responding. I am aware that Hasselblad have a small number of lenses that are price-competitive with the Fujinons. My statement was "Do prepare to break out the wallet, though, since many of the lenses cost 20-50% more than the equivalent Fujinon lens" - that's because if I go to B&H right now and search for Hasselblad lenses, I find that many of them are in the $4,000-5,000 range. The most expensive Fujinons are in the $3,000-3,500 range. You can also adapt a bunch of less expensive lenses to Fuji thanks to the focal plane shutter, where the Hasselblad will require the use of the slowest possible rolling shutter for any lens without a leaf shutter.` Are you talking about the fact that some lenses change focus slightly when stopping down the aperture? Because that's easily solved by just focusing at the aperture you plan to use (I also do this with some Canon camera/lens combos because the plane of sharpest focus seems to shift a little bit when stopping down). Otherwise, that sounds like absolute nonsense. I've done a number of timelapses with my GFX 100 and 100 II and the focus stays right where it should. And when using autofocus with GF lenses, when the autofocus hits right (less than people accustomed to Canon or Sony would expect), it's ridiculously razor sharp. This all really sounds like the usual toxic internet crap where somehow one of the best camera systems in existence is deemed "insufficient" by some troll whose only exposure to the camera comes from YouTube.
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What's going on with DJI / Hasselblad x2d II 100c lack of video mode?
Ilkka Nissila replied to Andrew Reid's topic in Cameras
Typical high-speed sync implementations either require the flash to fire a long pulse or a series of short pulses to match the timing of the moving gap of the focal-plane shutter. This results in flash energy loss due to most of the light being blocked by the shutter curtains at faster shutter speeds than the sync speed. When using a central shutter lens such as the Hasselblad XCD lenses, you don't lose light as you increase the shutter speed (to a point). So basically if you want to shoot at f/4 in bright sunlight, with a high-speed sync implementation, your flash needs to be several times more powerful than if using a central shutter lens. With the Hasselblad you can do this with a small flash instead of a powerful battery-powered flash which would be needed when balancing bright sunlight and flash at fast shutter speeds on a camera without either a global shutter or a central shutter. Each stop faster than sync speed loses one additional stop of light with the high-speed sync in a typical implementation. For the Fuji this would mean 1 stop loss at 1/250s, 2 stops at 1/500s, 3 stops at 1/1000s. So there is a huge difference in flash size that may be needed. Having to choose between strong rolling shutter distortion and line-skipped video (and cropping) is not really a pleasant compromise to make if your reputation is mainly based on producing images of the highest quality. I can understand that Hasselblad would simply not want to deal with the heat generated by resampling 100 MP images to (say) 8 MP (4K) since it's much more practical to make high-quality video using a camera with a smaller-format, lower-resolution sensor. The X2D II is particularly small and lightweight for a medium format camera and I can see them wanting to prioritize that over a heat-managed, larger, heavier camera that can shoot high-quality video. Hasselblad makes several reasonably affordable lenses for the X1D/X2D series of cameras. The 28/4 PP is 1899€, the 45/4 P is 1199€, and the 75/3.4 P is 2529€. Basically I would need the 28 and the 75. From what I can see there isn't much difference to Fuji lens prices. Considering what Jim Kasson revealed about Fuji GF series lenses not holding focus from shot to shot (even when set to manual focus) but instead there are slight shifts in focus that are enough to cause noticeable shot-to-shot variability in MTF in lens tests, it is difficult for me to see purchasing into their system. The slow flash sync speed just kills it for me. Another factor is that Hasselblad makes a digital back that can work with the XCD series of lenses and alternatively can be used on a view camera (with the sensor flush with the front of the back facilitating the use of movements). -
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