AS COMPARE TO SONY SLT-A77V.SONY ILCE-7RM2 IS DOWN IN IMAGE STABILIZATION.NO EFFECT OF 5 AXIS IMAGE STABLIZATION I FELT.BATTERY LIFE IS DEAD.YOU NEED 3 BATTERIES IF YOU WANT TO SHOOT CONTINUE FOR 2 OR 3 HOURS.
AS COMPARE TO SONY SLT-A77V.SONY ILCE-7RM2 IS DOWN IN IMAGE STABILIZATION.NO EFFECT OF 5 AXIS IMAGE STABLIZATION I FELT.BATTERY LIFE IS DEAD.YOU NEED 3 BATTERIES IF YOU WANT TO SHOOT CONTINUE FOR 2 OR 3 HOURS.
This camera is perfect for my that have a lot of Leica Lens. The Leica M with Leica lens is 10, the best in the world, but I cant use telezoom lens, so with this camera I can use my Leica lens and also sony (70-400). So I have the best of this 2 worlds.
Perfect with my leica lens
nothing
Looking back at the launch of the first A7-series cameras very much reminds me of the first time I picked up a Fuji X-Pro1 when it was just introduced. The cameras felt too experimental, with all kinds of bugs, quirks and annoying problems, some of which many of us considered "deal breakers".
Last weekend I was invited by the Cambrian Photography store in Colwyn Bay to hold a 60 minute seminar about mirrorless cameras for their annual Winter Show. During my presentation I touched upon sensor specifications, emphasising that despite the difference in size and megapixel count, I've managed...
Announced in June 2015, the α7R Mark II introduces the first 36 x 24 mm, back-illuminated CMOS sensor and is Sony's highest resolution E-mount camera to date. With a resolution of 42.4-megapixels, it's a step up from the 36 megapixels in the original α7R , which we reviewed in July 2014.
We know what you’re thinking: this camera costs over two and half grand, and that doesn’t even include a lens. And you’re right: the A7R II is eye-wateringly expensive – about £1,000 more than the original A7R was at launch. But it’s just so, so good. While it’s technically a “mirrorless camera” or a “compact system camera”, the drawbacks and disadvantages that those names convey don’t apply here. In the A7R II, Sony has made a no- compromise camera that combines impeccable build quality with a class-leading full-frame sensor, 5-axis image stabilisation, huge ISO range, fast autofocus, an excellent viewfinder and 4K video recording. And it’s far more compact than a DSLR. In short, it’s one of the best cameras you can buy today, and certainly the finest camera Sony has yet made.
Superb image quality; Excellent low light capabilities; Compact given its specs;
Video record button is annoyingly placed; We can’t afford one;
Superb image quality; Excellent low light capabilities; Compact given its specs;
Video record button is annoyingly placed; We can’t afford one;
It was hard to mark the A7R II down for Features & Build. The spec list is fully-fledged and outdoes its DSLR rivals in many areas. We'd have liked to see a secondary SD card slot, but huge capacities are available, so the camera did enough to warrant five stars in this criterion.
On a recent flight to Europe, I bonded permanently with my Sony A7RII , the increasingly legendary new full-frame mirrorless camera. It happened over New York City, when opportunity scrolled slowly into view shortly after departing from Newark.
If you've been using a digital SLR for the last couple of years, you might not have realised just how advanced new cameras have become. And Sony's a7R Mark II is just about the most advanced of them all - apart from one small but surprisingly annoying issue, it's just about the best camera you can...
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