any clues, weight vs image quality vs longevity?
SusanButan Hatchling 3 posts Joined Jul 2012 More info | Jul 16, 2012 17:13 | #1 any clues, weight vs image quality vs longevity?
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paulkaye Senior Member 559 posts Likes: 3 Joined Nov 2010 Location: Leamington, UK More info | Jul 16, 2012 17:24 | #2 Chalk and cheese these cameras aren't they? What sort of photography do you do? Paul
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CanonCameraFan Goldmember 1,694 posts Likes: 142 Joined Sep 2011 Location: Annapolis Maryland More info | Jul 17, 2012 21:04 | #3 Here is a nice review that will help with the specs on the Olympus. EOS 7D w/BG-E7 (3), 550EX (3), 430EX II, Vivitar 285HV, Opteka 6.5mm/3.5, Canon EF-S 10-18/4.5-5.6 IS STM, Canon EF-S 24/2.8 STM, Canon EF 40/2.8 STM, Canon EF 100mm/2.0 USM, Canon EF 70-300mm/4-5.6 L IS USM, Canon 77mm 500D Macro, Tamrac 614 Bag & 787 Backpack, Crumpler 8 MDH, 7 MDH, 6 MDH
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5x5photography Goldmember 1,156 posts Joined Feb 2009 Location: North Carolina More info | Jul 18, 2012 00:37 | #4 Is the 7D outdated? My firearms review site. http://rangehot.com/
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AlanU Cream of the Crop More info | Jul 18, 2012 00:40 | #5 Susan what do you currently own? 5Dmkiv |5Dmkiii | 24LmkII | 85 mkII L | | 16-35L mkII | 24-70 f/2.8L mkii| 70-200 f/2.8 ISL mkII| 600EX-RT x2 | 580 EX II x2 | Einstein's
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Jul 18, 2012 08:20 | #6 i'd go with the 7d, i believe its more versatile.
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Jul 18, 2012 09:05 | #7 7d isn't outdated. it was ahead of it's time. it's just now starting to get surpassed buy the "rumors" of new bodies. A7rIII | A7III | 12-24 F4 | 16-35 GM | 28-75 2.8 | 100-400 GM | 12mm 2.8 Fisheye | 35mm 2.8 | 85mm 1.8 | 35A | 85A | 200mm L F2 IS | MC-11
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AlanU Cream of the Crop More info | Jul 18, 2012 09:54 | #8 If a new 7D mark2 has the IQ of the OM-D I would buy it in a split second. The image quality I anticipated when the 7D was introduced years back I wished it was a big leap from the 50D. 5Dmkiv |5Dmkiii | 24LmkII | 85 mkII L | | 16-35L mkII | 24-70 f/2.8L mkii| 70-200 f/2.8 ISL mkII| 600EX-RT x2 | 580 EX II x2 | Einstein's
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Wilt Reader's Digest Condensed version of War and Peace [POTN Vol 1] More info | Jul 18, 2012 10:30 | #9 AlanU wrote in post #14732924 EM-5 Image quality is without a doubt better than the 7d. The ISO performance is superior to the 7d. Also the noise in the EM-5 is alot easier to clean up in post. The EM-5's ISO 3200 is extremely impressive compared to canon's current top 1.6 crop bodies.... I was once a "little camera" snob and thought they were sub par. I know there are alot of dslr people with similar views on "whatever" little camera attitudes. I can use the OM-D with full confidence using available light and get incredible results. I would take my Micro 4/3 file from my OM-D over my previous 50d, 1dmk3 anyday. A friend of mine that works at a camera shop agrees that the OM-d easily has better IQ than the canon 7D. ... Between the two I would choose the 7D if I had to document paid events due to the more reliable AF. For less serious events for personal use the EM-5 fits in a coat pocket with a 14mm f/2.5 lens. I seldom touch my 5dc since I bought my OM-D. As a long time user of Olympus OM series cameras, starting with ownership of the original OM-1 (later getting the OM-1MD), I have loved the compactness yet full capabilities compared to the more beastly sized cameras. I still have the OM-1MD as well as an OM-4. I really wish that a digital back were engineered to fit OM-n bodies, since they have removeable film backs and could easily accomodate such a conversion (with the digital electronics below the main body, like a battery grip). Compared to the OM, my Canon (my first Canon body shown) is a monster. When I first saw the OM-D, my first reaction was "OMG". However, the things about the OM-D that impair my acceptance of it are electronic viewfinder ISO 200 lowest speed Additionally, the smaller 4/3 format limits its performance by virtue of the smaller pixel area which is less optimal that the photon gathering capability of a larger pixel. The result (as stated by DP Review), " The noise and dynamic range levels are a fraction behind the very latest APS-C sensors, if you analyze the images at a 1:1 level...The price you pay for the E-M5's small size and small lenses is a a slightly smaller sensor than its APS-C peers. This can result in less light capturing ability at the same aperture and equivalent focal length, meaning a bit more noise in some situations." I have to admit, though, that the OM-D does quite respectably against the newer Canon APS-C bodies (7D is 'newer'?!) with their tightly packed pixels at high ISO. But then again, I have never been truly impressed with noise aspects of post-40D APS-C bodies. Here is a comparison at high ISO taken from DP Review reports: OTOH, its pure performance at high ISO is quite remarkable. DP Review reports that the OM-D resolution tests 4% better than 7D, which is a threshold which is scarcely detectable to the human eye. Yet the high ISO results are more dramatic than pure MTF resolution values would lead one to believe. This is a camera worth considering! You need to give me OK to edit your image and repost! Keep POTN alive and well with member support https://photography-on-the.net/forum/donate.php
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TeamSpeed 01010100 01010011 More info | Jul 18, 2012 10:46 | #10 I think that last comparison just shows how much better the JPG engine is in the Olympus vs the 7D, unless I am missing something. My ISO 6400 images look MUCH better on any of the 3-4 7Ds I have owned than what I see there. Here is an ISO 12800 before/after sample as well from one of the ballgames I shot. Overall image: Crop results: Past Equipment | My Personal Gallery
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Wilt Reader's Digest Condensed version of War and Peace [POTN Vol 1] More info | Jul 18, 2012 11:03 | #11 TeamSpeed wrote in post #14734729 I think that last comparison just shows how much better the JPG engine is in the Olympus vs the 7D, unless I am missing something. My ISO 6400 images look MUCH better on any of the 3-4 7Ds I have owned than what I see there. Here is a most recent 7D ISO 6400, completely untouched after the raw conversion. I am not saying that the Olympus wouldn't do better, but just that the 7D samples from that site seem to conflict with my own personal results. Here is an ISO 12800 before/after sample as well from one of the ballgames I shot. Overall image: Crop results: With no images to directly compare, it is hard to jump to any conclusion one way or the other. The 7D has had praise in the past for its IQ, as has the 5DII. Yet both seem less impressive than OM-D in direct comparison. That is not to fault the 7D or 5DII, but simply to show just what the new OM-D can do! Same as comparing Mark Spitz and Michael Phelps olympic swim times; Spitz is no slouch, Phelps is merely faster. You need to give me OK to edit your image and repost! Keep POTN alive and well with member support https://photography-on-the.net/forum/donate.php
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AlanU Cream of the Crop More info | Jul 18, 2012 11:05 | #12 Here's a photo taken in an extremely dark room in a museum when I was in alaska. The ISO was only 12800!!!! f/2.8 / 1/100 SS. This one was an easy ISO 4000 photo. Noise was effortless in removing in Lightroom. The EM-5's noise characteristic is effortless to remove while retaining beautiful skin texture. A high percentage of 7D owners do not know how to remove the hazy soft noise of the 7D and prevent plastic skin texture. I never cared for the 1dmk3 or the 7d in terms of noise and how the RAW file falls apart. The EM-5 actually still suprises me how it keeps together with sharp details after noise reduction!! 5Dmkiv |5Dmkiii | 24LmkII | 85 mkII L | | 16-35L mkII | 24-70 f/2.8L mkii| 70-200 f/2.8 ISL mkII| 600EX-RT x2 | 580 EX II x2 | Einstein's
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AlanU Cream of the Crop More info | Jul 18, 2012 11:11 | #13 This was an easy ultra clean ISO 640 The fact that I shoot with available light only with this camera I cannot believe how well it works. This is a great camera for documenting life events that does not include fast moving sports or sprinting kids. Otherwise this camera has really shocked me in how well it just works in a coat pocket size package. I'll have 3 kids to lug around and this camera is soooo small and portable. 5Dmkiv |5Dmkiii | 24LmkII | 85 mkII L | | 16-35L mkII | 24-70 f/2.8L mkii| 70-200 f/2.8 ISL mkII| 600EX-RT x2 | 580 EX II x2 | Einstein's
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kf095 Out buying Wheaties More info | Jul 18, 2012 11:13 | #14 I knew one ex pro photog. He used to take pictures to make money for living. Thousands of portraits, 500+ weddings. M-E and ME blog
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gardengirl13 Goldmember 1,798 posts Joined Feb 2006 Location: US More info | Jul 18, 2012 11:26 | #15 AlanU wrote in post #14734491 The thing about the M43 system is that "wyswyg" (what you see is what you get) in the lcd or view finder. So in other words virtually all of your photos have perfect exposure since you tweak the settings as your in the situation. I dont shoot JPG but realistically for a lazy day I could print the photos straight out of camera. I find myself agreeing with Alan often, but with this not so much. I look through the view finder and am not overly happy, look at the LCD in play mode and it's better, but man once it's downloaded to the computer I think it looks better yet! Of course I shoot jpeg. photos
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