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Archive 2012 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera

  
 
okafoja
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p.5 #1 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


jamesf99 wrote:
I've tried to clarify my original post in this thread so most can understand it. Some may still not get it, but such is life...

This is a gear forum and my post was written in the context of posts I've read here, but some posters may not have read the same posts, have heard the same things, or may have never encountered an AF deficiency problem.

Not to drag anyone in to this mess unwillingly, but I think MVers said it best on a few occasions, when he questioned our AF expectations for a $3,000 camera. Others have done the same,
...Show more

Your original post made a lot of sense to many of us but your sin on the original post was that you mentioned 7D. Next time stay away from 7D and all will be fine.



Feb 09, 2012 at 11:19 AM
jamesf99
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p.5 #2 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


Jeff wrote:
Jim, with all due respect, your not having owned/used a 7D and relying primarily on internet rhetoric to fuel your 'argument' does indeed make it seem like another post intended to rile up the natives, just for sport.

People need to calm a bit, quit using 'WTF' and 's*^t' in every other post, stop posting whiner threads about apeople whining in the forums, and just sit on their hands and wait and see what happens with Canon's upcoming offerings. Stopping by the forums is getting increasingly like accidentally changing the channel to kick-boxing (or whatever they call it these days).

Respectfully,

Jeff


Thanks Jeff. it's always nice to see a questioning/dissenting view not presented as an attack, labeled a troll post, or similar. I appreciate it.

My modified post, a meager mea culpa on fast typing, and perhaps incomplete expression of thoughts confused some here, and perhaps some of them legitimately. As for the others, well... that's a digression.

I'm "spun up" myself, but it's not because of Nikon (though it didn't help). I also don't feel any company owes me anything, even if I've been a customer for several decades. Asking, or demanding more, is not whining. All companies need to make a profit to keep the doors open, but what many others here also recognize is when we're getting a lot less than we should at the prices we're paying (not everyone does, and some may simply not care).

I don't want to sell $30k in Canon gear and buy something else, but I no longer can take the annual excuses. What I, and many others want, is for Canon to treat its customers as if they actually can add 2+2 and know that it equals 4, not 1,297 as Canon would have us believe. Sadly, IMO, for the last 5+ years, they've decided that no one knows basic math and will believe anything they're told.

And you're right, we have to wait to see what Canon does and who knows, just as they did a last minute price hike on the 1D3, perhaps they'll come out with something better than expected at the last minute this time.

regards, J-


Edited on Feb 09, 2012 at 12:02 PM · View previous versions



Feb 09, 2012 at 11:27 AM
jamesf99
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p.5 #3 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


okafoja wrote:
Your original post made a lot of sense to many of us but your sin on the original post was that you mentioned 7D. Next time stay away from 7D and all will be fine.


Thanks.

Many of you are a little "more capable" than others, but I hope I clarified it anyway (and not made it worse).



Feb 09, 2012 at 11:29 AM
Jeff Nolten
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p.5 #4 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


okafoja wrote:
Your argument doesn't hold water anymore in this day and age. Just take a look at Nikon. I just don't understand why you guys continue to make excuses for Canon and at the same time pretend as if Nikon does not exist.


It makes perfect sense:

Canon 7D: $1400
Canon 5D II: $2200
Nikon D700: $2700
Nikon D800: $3000 est.
Canon 1DIV: $5000
Canon 1D-X: $6000 est.

Back in the 60s and 70s there were two top tier camera/lens makers Nikon and Leica. Canon was 2nd tier (in sales not necessarily in quality) along with Pentax and Minolta, etc. Now Canon is the market leader in terms of sales but Nikon is still a top tier camera/lens maker. Surprise surprise, they make competitive cameras. Pick your price range and feature set and buy a great camera.


Edited on Feb 09, 2012 at 12:37 PM · View previous versions



Feb 09, 2012 at 11:43 AM
OntheRez
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p.5 #5 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


James,

It seems to be kind of hard to have a rational discussion around here these days. I think you are saying that given how good Canon AF was "back in the day" (with the 1998 street price reference), why are we not seeing comparable AF capacity across the higher end of the Canon line. Actually this is a truly valid question. I am currently shooting a 7D and a 1DIII. I got the 7D in an emergency when I was employed as a sports reporter/photographer and found that my 1DIIn just couldn't get a shot in the really bad like I had to work with. The 7D is "OK" but I only bought it used as I couldn't find a 1DIII in the short time frame I had to work with.

I shot the 7D thru football, volleyball and into basketball and grew increasingly frustrated with both its handling (a matter of personal preference) and its maddening tendency to "back focus" for want of a better term. I just picked up a 1DIII and while it is a far more complex beast to learn, I'm already seeing a much higher keeper rate and am actually getting the shot I'm aiming for.

Why do manufacturers "dumb down" AF systems? Having worked in a technical field I can give you one absolute and a second imponderable. The absolute is that the product released (any technical product) is controlled by the marketing droids and the bean counters. Doesn't really matter how brilliant the engineering solutions might be if the droids and bean counters don't bless it, it ain't going to happen.

The imponderable. I do not know how much the cost of a camera can be attributed to its AF system. The 7D with its dual digic (5?) processors would seem to have the power to support a complete AF system yet it doesn't. The only time I find the 7D out performing the 1DIII is when I've had to go to extreme ISO because of light conditions. In other words, the 1DIII - from my perspective - is ISO limited, not AF. I got the 1DIII because the 7D repeatedly with a variety of lenses and in various situations would focus on some part of the field of view utterly unconnected to where I was aiming. Perhaps I'm just a lousy photog blaming my tools for my own incompetence, but I can bluntly state that since I've started using the 1DIII my keeper rate has gone up significantly. I've even shot parts of the same game with the same lenses using the two cameras. The 1DIII keeps doing better than the 7D.

I have no clue why Canon "seems" to cripple its lower price offerings even when they are expensive devices like the 5D and the 7D. I also doubt that if these cameras had excellent AF they'd "cannibalize" the professional level market. The advantages of the 1D series over other Canon offerings is many more things than just the AF. Durability for one jumps to mind. The only thing I can assert with a degree of confidence in this discussion is that Canon is capable of far better cameras than they currently sell. It is their corporate structure that makes the choices, not the engineers, programmers, and technicians.

Robert



Feb 09, 2012 at 11:50 AM
okafoja
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p.5 #6 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


Jeff Nolten wrote:
It makes perfect sense:

Canon 7D: $1400
Canon 5D: $2200
Nikon D700: $2700
Nikon D800: $3000 est.
Canon 1DIV: $5000
Canon 1D-X: $6000 est.

Back in the 60s and 70s there were two top tier camera/lens makers Nikon and Leica. Canon was 2nd tier along with Pentax and Minolta, etc. Now Canon is the market leader in terms of sales but Nikon is still a top tier camera/lens maker. Surprise surprise, they make competitive cameras. Pick your price range and feature set and buy a great camera.



I don't know where you get your prices from and 5DII seems to be missing on your list. I guess you kind of forget about it. If it makes sense to you all I can say is more grease to your elbow.



Feb 09, 2012 at 11:56 AM
MintMar
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p.5 #7 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


Jeff Nolten wrote:
It makes perfect sense:

Canon 7D: $1400
Canon 5D: $2200
Nikon D700: $2700
Nikon D800: $3000 est.
Canon 1DIV: $5000
Canon 1D-X: $6000 est.

Back in the 60s and 70s there were two top tier camera/lens makers Nikon and Leica. Canon was 2nd tier along with Pentax and Minolta, etc. Now Canon is the market leader in terms of sales but Nikon is still a top tier camera/lens maker. Surprise surprise, they make competitive cameras. Pick your price range and feature set and buy a great camera.


That ladder is nice but quite unreal as you present it. You can't pick any camera just like that if you have some lens set already that is incompatible with the chosen camera. Your easy solution would then be bogged down in a brand switch.



Feb 09, 2012 at 12:02 PM
surf monkey
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p.5 #8 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


OntheRez poses one very good and valid question:
How much of difference in cost is there between a pro series AF system and the less capable ones?

Is there a much more complicated system in current DSLRs compared to great analog SLRs from the past?
If there is a huge difference in price how does Nikon manage to put pro AF into their mid-priced DSLRs?



Feb 09, 2012 at 12:08 PM
MintMar
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p.5 #9 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


OntheRez wrote:
I have no clue why Canon "seems" to cripple its lower price offerings even when they are expensive devices like the 5D and the 7D. I also doubt that if these cameras had excellent AF they'd "cannibalize" the professional level market. The advantages of the 1D series over other Canon offerings is many more things than just the AF. Durability for one jumps to mind. The only thing I can assert with a degree of confidence in this discussion is that Canon is capable of far better cameras than they currently sell. It is their corporate structure that makes the
...Show more

Agreed.

When I looked at the AF systems history at Canon, it seemed like some clever bean counter came about and said: "Oh! Digital! A completely new era! Let's try to resale our obsolete tech again!" And thus D30 with magnesium body and puny 3pt AF was born in 2000, 2 years after EOS-3 with 45pt AF, and a Film Rebel with 5 or 7pt AF.

It seems that folks mostly look at it all as if the branch of the digital cameras was somehow separate from the branch of development of the film cameras. Yes, 5D AF was better than the one in 20D, which was better than the one in 10D, and that one was better than the AF in D30. But compared to EOS-3? All of them combined they look obsolete to the EOS-3 technology (even without ECF).



Feb 09, 2012 at 12:23 PM
MintMar
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p.5 #10 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


surf monkey wrote:
OntheRez poses one very good and valid question:
How much of difference in cost is there between a pro series AF system and the less capable ones?

Is there a much more complicated system in current DSLRs compared to great analog SLRs from the past?
If there is a huge difference in price how does Nikon manage to put pro AF into their mid-priced DSLRs?


Also don't forget that Nikon put a slower but basically unchanged version of that "pro AF" into an "advanced APS-C" camera, D300, at that time its equivalent was xxD line at Canon.

So in fact it's not "How come D700?" question but "How come D300?" question we should ask first.



Feb 09, 2012 at 12:30 PM
atroester
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p.5 #11 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


I just sold my 7D but I loved the AF -- but if Canon doesn't do a pro-level AF in their new 5D3, X, (whatever they call it) -- my 5D2's camera-bag-buddy will be a D800. What's wrong with running a half-and-half rig? I'd prefer not to, but I'm not so name-loyal that I'll pass on a better body.

I think the issue everyone is trying to discuss here is NOT the idea that 5D2's AF is bad and you can't get a good action picture, but that up until the D800, $3000 or so dollars didn't get you close to pro-level AF in a full-frame package.

I will not buy the new Canon body if it only has the 7D AF, and I really doubt it will as it's already about 3 years old. What I also doubt, though, is that they will do a 51-point AF. What it will really come down to for me is Canon's new body AF vs. D800 AF and how great the difference is. I'm not afraid to pick up a couple Nikon lenses.




Feb 09, 2012 at 12:39 PM
Jeff Nolten
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p.5 #12 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


okafoja wrote:
I don't know where you get your prices from and 5DII seems to be missing on your list. I guess you kind of forget about it. If it makes sense to you all I can say is more grease to your elbow.


All prices are this a.m.'s new B&H prices except the ones marked "est" and the 5D price is for the 5D II which I thought obvious. Used 5Dcs are going for ~$1000.

If price difference doesn't make sense to you in terms of feature set then probably not much will. And you can keep your elbow grease thank you very much.



Feb 09, 2012 at 12:41 PM
atroester
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p.5 #13 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


I also love how every person's "5D2 has just fine AF" examples are in optimal daylight conditions and were center-point focusing

The unfortunate fact is that anything INDOORS renders the 9-point AF = 1 decent center point. Anyone else tired of "Center-point and re-compose"? The outdoor photos mean nothing in the argument that the 5D2's AF is good. As expensive as the 5D2 is, "Center-point and re-compose" shouldn't be coming out of your mouth. I only put up with it because it spits out gorgeous files and video.



Feb 09, 2012 at 12:44 PM
jamesf99
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p.5 #14 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


thanks Robert. Another voice of reason and sound questioning comes through - even if my original post was hastily written and fueled by disgust.


OntheRez wrote:
James,

It seems to be kind of hard to have a rational discussion around here these days. I think you are saying that given how good Canon AF was "back in the day" (with the 1998 street price reference), why are we not seeing comparable AF capacity across the higher end of the Canon line. Actually this is a truly valid question. I am currently shooting a 7D and a 1DIII. I got the 7D in an emergency when I was employed as a sports reporter/photographer and found that my 1DIIn just couldn't get a shot in the really bad like
...Show more

I've not used a 7d, but there are several "very capable" people here (I won't drag them into this) that have my photographic respect that have said some less than admiring things about its AF. I'm pretty sure - in some cases - it's better than a 5 series, but perhaps not in the center. for the life of me I can't accept than again in a $3k expenditure (or potentially more if Canon has their way).

I made the same marketing comment in another thread and was initially attacked for it, but I think it became clear to all who really controls product features and pricing. I'm guessing that many people don't know what's going on and believe we're getting the products we are because that's all Canon can do. It's so far from what they CAN do and deliver it's... it's... I'll say it's beyond sad...

PS - I've worked in high tech marketing and was appalled at how the game is played, but it is what it is these days, and has probably always been the case. I will admit to a failing of mine and that's that I tend to think that everyone has access to the information and knows what's going on, but it isn't true. I may have seem more than some, but I need to keep in mind that people here have widely disparate backgrounds and not all have had a chance to see "the man behind the curtain".

The imponderable. I do not know how much the cost of a camera can be attributed to its AF system. The 7D with its dual digic (5?) processors would seem to have the power to support a complete AF system yet it doesn't. The only time I find the 7D out performing the 1DIII is when I've had to go to extreme ISO because of light conditions. In other words, the 1DIII - from my perspective - is ISO limited, not AF. I got the 1DIII because the 7D repeatedly with a variety of lenses and in various situations would focus...Show more

*Assuming* the AF is in a Digic processors (or the like), they are used across the range, from the lowliest $100 (full retail) P&S to the $6800 1Dx. They are identical - a Digic 3 is a 3, 4 is a 4, etc. - and each probably costs a couple of bucks to make, if that....that's not counting engineering time, but when you consider Canon sells P&S cameras to retailers at less than $100 (or they did) and still makes a profit, you can understand that the fully loaded cost is insignificant (the rest of the camera's parts are also included, such as lens, screen, case, etc.). Using multiple Digic processors (not accounting for the board layout/logic development) is mice nuts when it comes to cost.


I have no clue why Canon "seems" to cripple its lower price offerings even when they are expensive devices like the 5D and the 7D. I also doubt that if these cameras had excellent AF they'd "cannibalize" the professional level market. The advantages of the 1D series over other Canon offerings is many more things than just the AF. Durability for one jumps to mind. The only thing I can assert with a degree of confidence in this discussion is that Canon is capable of far better cameras than they currently sell. It is their corporate structure that makes the choices,
...Show more

I think Canon is simply protecting a cash cow.The usual term for what they do is "product differentiation" and Canon does most of it via firmware/software. Obviously, build quality and parts play a part, but for the most part, it's all smoke and mirrors. An interesting thread would be to go through the line and - by deduction - come up with a "highly probable" cost structure. It might open some eyes.

They've reaped big profits from these for a long time. I've been willing to pay what they asked for many decades (film/digital) but there's no longer any justification for it. We have 16-24MP cameras shooting at 9-10FPS with AF, and selling for $1300 or less (Sony nex-7 24mp, 10FPS) and Canon tells us that the 5d2 can only do 3.9 FPS at 21mp (software crippling). no, a nex-7 is not a FF camera, but a mp is a mp is a mp.

Many people refuse to believe how little these cost vs the prices we pay, and I'm not sure exactly why, but the resistance is amazing to me. Many would rather shoot the messenger than accept they are being fleeced.

thanks again for the discussion.

J-



Feb 09, 2012 at 12:46 PM
Jeff Nolten
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p.5 #15 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


MintMar wrote:
That ladder is nice but quite unreal as you present it. You can't pick any camera just like that if you have some lens set already that is incompatible with the chosen camera. Your easy solution would then be bogged down in a brand switch.


As others have said, changing whole systems is a whole other level of complexity. My point was to illustrate the cost vs feature set. In other words to answer the "why doesn't the 7D have a D800 or 1D AF system" question. But enough people have said that "if the 5D III doesn't have XXX AF system then I'm switching to Nikon". So they seem to think its just like that.

For me personally, the Nikon offerings hold only academic interest. I've spent a decade investing in Canon lenses and too many body upgrades. I chose Canon because of friends' recommendations and cost effectiveness at the time, not because I thought Canon generally superior to Nikon. Both are excellent. If Nikon releases a feature set that is superior to Canon's this cycle, Canon will catch up next cycle. No big deal.

What I really don't understand is why so many are getting worked up that Nikon has released a camera that does seem to advance the technology vs price. Canon is going to have to respond and that can only be a good thing.

Edit: To those who think Canon is out to get them, here is a quote from Robert Heinlein, 1973,
"Of course the game is rigged. Don't let that stop you--if you don't play, you can't win."

And here is another from the same book for James99 whose inflammatory rhetoric for a simple question got my goat:
"Moving parts in rubbing contact require lubrication to avoid excessive wear. Honorifics and formal politeness provide lubrication where people rub together. Often the very young, the untraveled, the naive, the unsophisticated, deplore these formalities as 'empty,' 'meaningless,' or 'dishonest,' and scorn to use them. No matter how 'pure' their motives, they thereby throw sand into machinery that does not work too well at best."

Oh, and one last one from my spiritual guru Jimmy Buffett:
"You only have two choices, having fun or freaking out!"

Cheers


Edited on Feb 09, 2012 at 01:55 PM · View previous versions



Feb 09, 2012 at 01:01 PM
jamesf99
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p.5 #16 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


Jeff Nolten wrote:
As others have said, changing whole systems is a whole other level of complexity. My point was to illustrate the cost vs feature set. In other words to answer the "why doesn't the 7D have a Nikon or 1D AF system" question. But enough people have said that "if the 5D III doesn't have XXX AF system then I'm switching to Nikon". So they seem to think its just like that.

For me personally, the Nikon offerings hold only academic interest. I've spent a decade investing in Canon lenses and too many body upgrades. I chose Canon because of friends'
...Show more


I don't want to dump all my stuff and switch either. Nikon offers good products (now), but this is not really about them or the D800. This is about what Canon is doing or not doing to us, and has done to us all for many years. Dribbling little changes, crippled features, for premium prices and telling us "that's all you can have".

I'm not alone in my sentiments, but I may be more vocal than many, but I'm also not an apologist for any company. These are tools, not just toys, for many of us and they cost real money. They are not free, and I've used them to earn a living.

I'm glad that more people here are speaking up and contributing valid comments, even if we're getting away from the original AF issue. It's not just from frustration, but a recognition that we're really not being served equitably. Also, Perhaps what you're not considering is that many have had problems over the last 5+ years, and it's only compounded by the regular BS Canon dishes out. We can cover the atrocities in another thread.

I've "voiced" (some say I've whined/complained) how little these things cost to make and how little we're really getting for years, but it has done little good up to now. What Nikon has done is made my argument for me. Even the blind can see now if they stop to look. There's just no reason (economic or technical) to settle for a down market AF anymore. That's been the point many have tried to make for so long, and it's certainly not about waiting another 3-4 years for Canon to finally decide to capitulate, match the competition, and provide what they should have done 5-6 years ago, at a minimum.

BTW- Nikon is a smaller company with a purportedly heavier cost structure, yet faces the same 30% yen to USD devaluation that Canon does. Think about that for a minute. If we didn't have a 30% FX discrepancy Nikon's D800 would be selling for $2100 (2008 dollars), full retail... Makes you wonder doesn't it? How can they sell a state of the art FF 36mp sensor - that they have to **buy** from Sony - add in their best AF, dual card slots, 100% VF with features, etc. all for what is in reality a $2100 camera and still make money? So how expensive is the D800 from a cost perspective? Does that make sense? Jack it up to $3k today and juxtapose it with what we've got from Canon and if it didn't make sense to you before, you should see it's (Canon's offering) not so appealing..




Feb 09, 2012 at 01:42 PM
RobertLynn
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p.5 #17 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


So I've gathered this,

You've not used a 7D.
You seem to only respect people you agree with, because if we disagree...well, we didn't look!

By your evidence criteria, I could pull up people saying the 1 series are pieces of crap too. Een the 1dx even though these people haven't shot it.

I'm not saying it is the best af out there, but crippled? Hardly. Worse than a 5d2? Definitely not (I've used those too).

Your sin wasn't mentioning the 7d. Your sin was saying something about a system youve never used, and are only picking the comments you WANT to see rather than as a whole. Sort of like the person who reads 800 reviews on lowes website, about a tool or appliance, finds the ONE complaint and extrapolates that into a larger discussion as to how it's hampered in some way.

I use both 1 and 7 series without problems. My complaints about the 7 series aren't in the auto focus department. I've been impressed with af from 20/30/40/7/5/5d2/1d2/1d2n/1d3, and ironically enough, I've been let down by every single one of them before too.



Feb 09, 2012 at 01:50 PM
RobertLynn
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p.5 #18 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


Your longer post, just before my previous one, I can agree with to a point. I don't stick up for canon, and want more for my dollar. Let's drop the reference to 2008 and inflation though, because for all intents and purposes other than saying "hey it's cheaper" are moot. What will happen is some yonuts will say the d800 costs 2100 while the blah blah costs this.

Sort of like the people saying the 24-70 doubled in price when 10 years ago it msrp for just 200 less than current msrp.

I don't think that canon or any company should give anything away, like it worked for canon for how long? If Nikon was so much better why didn't everyone switch? See that's why they kept doing what they were.

But nikons most recent bodies (d700/d3 series and now the d4/800) are really pushing the envelope. What do you do to differentiate yourself from competition? Offer something they don't, Nikon is really pushing the envelope on that (but let's not kid ourselves...600 for a battery grip). What's the point of a low entry cost when the extras will kill you?

But back to the point, now canon absolutely cannot trickle down a bullshit af system into their next bodes. Let's not kid ourself though, there are many report of the af center point of the 5d2 being much better than the center f the d700...and the d700 had much better outside points.

Let's also not compare the d800 to two+ year old canon bodies. Let's see if canon gets off of their dead asses and gets in gear.



Feb 09, 2012 at 01:58 PM
jamesf99
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p.5 #19 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


RobertLynn wrote:
So I've gathered this,

You've not used a 7D.
You seem to only respect people you agree with, because if we disagree...well, we didn't look!

By your evidence criteria, I could pull up people saying the 1 series are pieces of crap too. Een the 1dx even though these people haven't shot it.

I'm not saying it is the best af out there, but crippled? Hardly. Worse than a 5d2? Definitely not (I've used those too).

Your sin wasn't mentioning the 7d. Your sin was saying something about a system youve never used, and are only picking the comments you WANT to see rather
...Show more

Out posts crossed, but I'm not going to rewrite this...


My sin? Come on Robert, it's no sin except to those that go looking for a hut to set on fire with their torches, which seems to be a great sport around here now. I apologized for my hastily written post, but not the sentiment. No retractions from me, so lets put that behind us.

I would suggest you read the rest of the thread to see who has added comments and what they've said, but let's recap.. It's about the 7d AF juxtaposed with something better, not the other features of the camera. And yes, without having used it, I can take the word of some people that it's not something I'd want in a new camera. I can also tell you about other products that I haven't used and don't ever have to use to know they're not what I want; I'm sure you can do the same. Again, read the subsequent posts here. Is the 2-3 year old 7d AF horrible? No. Is it great? Probably not according to what I've read, especially when compared to other systems. No AF system is infallible, perfect, or the right tool for every job.

So, assuming you're going to read the other replies, please tell me why would anyone want to use the 7d AF in a new, and more than likely $3k+ camera. Because it's not as bad as the 5d's AF? Is that your point? Is that a rationalization of why i should spend $3k(?) on a new camera that has the AF from a $1500'ish body and be pleased? Help me out here, because I haven't been able to complete that type of rationalization when Canon dumps a load on me, so perhaps you can convince me using some other logic.

Update: those that can't tell the difference between 2008 and 2012 can't be helped here. The cost comparison is absolutely valid until Canon releases something else. The cost structure we see is because the USD to Yen ratio is out of whack and if it doesn't change, things are going to get a lot rougher for a lot more companies in both countries but that's a different discussion. Right now, try to by a FF camera and you basically have one choice - a 5d2. The 1Ds3 is a discontinued model even if it's on their site...



Feb 09, 2012 at 02:25 PM
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p.5 #20 · 7d AF vs 1-series AF in a new camera


MintMar wrote:
Agreed.

When I looked at the AF systems history at Canon, it seemed like some clever bean counter came about and said: "Oh! Digital! A completely new era! Let's try to resale our obsolete tech again!" And thus D30 with magnesium body and puny 3pt AF was born in 2000, 2 years after EOS-3 with 45pt AF, and a Film Rebel with 5 or 7pt AF.

It seems that folks mostly look at it all as if the branch of the digital cameras was somehow separate from the branch of development of the film cameras. Yes, 5D AF was better than the
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+1

it's the bean counters/marketing droids not the engineers who decide that sort of thing (not the engineers are perfect see the initial 1D3 AF module, but that is an entirely different sort of matter), sometimes their machinations help short and long term but there are plenty of carcasses of companies around due things taken too for in too short-sighted ways



Feb 09, 2012 at 02:34 PM
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