F
Frank Granovski
Guest
So I guess no one knows what the lag is, eh? Anyway, I find it rather Ikonic that for the price of 1 M7 you can buy two and a half ZIs. 
Taipei-metro said:37 msec. following # should be msec.
50 or less, fast shutter.
80 or less, kinda fast shutter.
120 or slower, you feel the shutter lag.
F5, 47. EOS 1-V, 57. Contax RTS III, 60.
F100 62, EOS 3 59, Maxxum 7 85,
EOS 7 99. FM3A 48. Contax RX 99.
EOS 1v HS, 55. EOS RT 15.
N80 134, Contax Aria 159, Pentax MZ-S 122
Leica M2 26
Fuji one-time-use disposble 0
Believe it or not....
Taipei-metro said:EOS 1v HS, 55. EOS RT 15.
N80 134, Contax Aria 159, Pentax MZ-S 122
Leica M2 26
James Burton said:Interesting. I don't understand how an SLR can ever approach an RF.
James
James Burton said:Interesting. I don't understand how an SLR can ever approach an RF.
For an SLR there are 2 distinct physical actions
- mirror flip up + damping and aperture shutdown (can be simultaneous)
- trigger 1st curtain
No matter how fast you make the mirror, it's the damping that would be the limiting factor in my miniscule imagination. By damping I mean wait for whatever stops the mirror, to absorb the impact.
Any real engineers out there care to elaborate?
In practice, my EOS-30 has negligible shutter delay (ignoring auto-focus as always). But I always expected shutter-only cameras to be measurably faster.
Like an order of magnitude.
Eos RT (Real time) has a fixed pellicle mirror so no movement on the mirror part, of course a bit dim viewfinder is the side effect.
Canon claimmed 0.008 sec to take a picture (shutter curtain to open and closed time) when shutter's half pressed. so 15 msec. on a production RT without pre-pressed shutter is not too far off.
Eos have many models, even different model names in Japan, US and Europe for the same camera, I don't know Eos 30, tell me the specs and what year model or your purchase date( if bought new), maybe I can check the shutter lag time for you.
If it's a Canon Rebel 300, it's 128 msec. Rebel X, G, G-II, 2000, 3000, all hovering around 125-135msec. which are not too bad for lower end cameras.
Elan II(Eos 55) is 105msec.
My Elan 7 is 99ms, a lot faster than N80's 134msec.
James Burton said:Interesting. I don't understand how an SLR can ever approach an RF.
For an SLR there are 2 distinct physical actions
- mirror flip up + damping and aperture shutdown (can be simultaneous)
- trigger 1st curtain
No matter how fast you make the mirror, it's the damping that would be the limiting factor in my miniscule imagination. By damping I mean wait for whatever stops the mirror, to absorb the impact.
Any real engineers out there care to elaborate?
In practice, my EOS-30 has negligible shutter delay (ignoring auto-focus as always). But I always expected shutter-only cameras to be measurably faster.
Like an order of magnitude.
50mm 1.4, set at 1.4, shutter set at 1/250, manual focus.
Sensor 1, wired shutter button to computer.
Sensor 2, wired 24x36mm film plain to computer.
Hit the shutter w wired remote at 12:00 hour, if the sensor 2 sense the light hitting it at 13:00 hour, that means the shutter time lag is 3,600 sec.
Mileage may vary depending on your driving habbit.
The most expensive Contax RTS-III ( retail $3,300) can not beat the RF camera.
And the winner is, the disposable camera.
Taipei-metro said:Eos RT (Real time) has a fixed pellicle mirror so no movement on the mirror part, of course a bit dim viewfinder is the side effect.
Taipei-metro said:I don't know Eos 30, tell me the specs and what year model or your purchase date( if bought new), maybe I can check the shutter lag time for you.
If it's a Canon Rebel 300, it's 128 msec.
Taipei-metro said:My Elan 7 is 99ms, a lot faster than N80's 134msec.
Taipei-metro said:Mileage may vary depending on your driving habbit.
The most expensive Contax RTS-III ( retail $3,300) can not beat the RF camera.
And the winner is, the disposable camera.
Bertram2 said:Nobody has asked until now what the lag definition shall be for this comparison ??
I think this discussion suffers from the problem that everybody works with his personally assumpted definition ?
In my definition this lag is the the time from releasing the shutter (excluded button travel to the point of release !) until the first curtain begin to run !?
regit said:Does anyone know the shutter lag of the Ikon?
TEZillman said:The exposure delay amounts to a mere 25 milliseconds in spite of the electronic control and thus it is nearly ten times faster than that of a conventional autofocus single-lens-reflex camera.
shutterflower said:So little as to make no matter.
Taipei-metro said:37 msec. following # should be msec.
50 or less, fast shutter.
80 or less, kinda fast shutter.
120 or slower, you feel the shutter lag.
F5, 47. EOS 1-V, 57. Contax RTS III, 60.
F100 62, EOS 3 59, Maxxum 7 85,
EOS 7 99. FM3A 48. Contax RX 99.
EOS 1v HS, 55. EOS RT 15.
N80 134, Contax Aria 159, Pentax MZ-S 122
Leica M2 26
Fuji one-time-use disposble 0
Believe it or not....