newsgrunt
Well-known
If the image quality is anywhere near the AW1, AND is waterproof. AND has interchangeable lenses, it should be a winner. I've got a loaner Nikon AW1 to play with till the new year, can't wait to see what it can do.
Competition is good 😀. I am hoping this will help the pricing situation. Right now apsc is still the best in terms of
- price
- weight
- overall size
- cost
Whether we are talking camera body or lens or mirrorless or dslr..
If u got a lot of legacy ff native canon or Nikon glass, then u got skin in this game. I have a lot of Nikon glass around, but never wanted to upgrade to Nikon ff dslr.. Mirrorless, a lot depends on price, overall weight, and features. In they come in around $1200 and has a Sony a7 like user control style interface w/ the dual control dials and the separate exposure comp dial, I would go for it.. Knowing that they are going to have a adapter for legacy glass like they did for the Nikon One. I would love to c a 40f2 pancake for this setup as well.
My Nikon apsc dslr is now coming up to 4 years old and not seeing very much use.. Have not had much urge to upgrade. Mirrorless may definitely change that picture 😛
Anyway just wishful thinking on my part.
Gary
With the Sonys very much "half-finished", the FF EVIL market is there for the taking. I seriously doubt Nikon is up to it, but I hope I'm wrong. 🙂
As I remember u had both the a7 and a7r...what do u think are the areas that are half finished out if curiosity. I guess a better way to ask as I think about it.. What do u think Nikon needs to do vs a Sony a7 maybe?
Gary
Daveleo
Nikon already designed an dslr af adapter for their Nikon One.. Would make sense to do the same for their new mirrorless.. Canon did the same for their eos m if I remember correctly.
Gary
Hi Gary.
The main thing is not to get too proprietary and think everyone only will want to use Nikon lenses. EVIL means a small package and we know what the best small lenses in the world are. They will have a real hit if it works with M glass.
That means short register mount and thin sensor cover. They can always add a fancy adapter to make the nikon glass AF etc.
That's the biggest hurdle, and frankly I very much doubt they will clear it. Greed will shrink their pie.
Next, they will have to match Sony's MF aids, which really are the best I've seen, though now I prefer a RF---that took a lot of shots LOL--that doesn't sound too hard except nobody else has done it yet.
There's really nothing to stop them hitting a home run except the inevitable design by committee politics. The tech is ready to go. But there would be trade-offs for that home run machine, as it's thin cover may limit AF and video performance a tad.
The really really smart thing would be to make two machines, one optimized to do what I describe above and the other just to please the AF and video crowd.
Again, that would not be hard.
As to the Sony's weaknesses, besides the buzz-kill sensor stack, which hamstrings the camera in a multitude of ways, the interface is far from elegant, esp the menus, and the RAW files are execrable. The build is nowhere near the Canikon FF DSLRs or Leica, in fact I preferred the nex-5 for build quality. But it's OK. Not terrible, not great.
As always I have to add: you see great photography with the A7 series, despite the flaws. The smearing, at least is smooth. The centers are very very good with a bunch of glass. For many shots that's all you need anyway. And the smearing lessens the closer you focus on all of them.
Many shooters a lot better than me love the A7. That's why I need every advantage, aka Leica M9. LOL