Are you sure? Where do you think the S1R mkII is lacking?- If Sigma were ever to build a "normal" camera, it could very well be a pro-level sports camera. And guess what? Panasonic as left that door open.
Are you sure? Where do you think the S1R mkII is lacking?
Personally, I'd be doing just fine. I don't own a single Sigma I series lens, doing just fine with what Panasonic makes. In saying that, I'm not ruling them out for future purchases, that would just be sillyWhat would we do without the Sigma i-series? Shooting analog or buy a Leica M?
don't own a single Sigma I series lens
No, I use the Canon EF 40mm pancake. Which I like very much. 45 is too close to 50mm for my liking. That's why I'm hoping someone does a native 40mm L mount pancake. Not 43 or 45mm.I thought you have the Sigma 45/2.8?
Are you sure? Where do you think the S1R mkII is lacking?
Me neither. But I am curious as what's missing. Personally, I don't see a stacked sensor as imperative. It brings its own set of compromises along with it, about the only real advantage I can see is the faster readout, but if you can't get your shot at 10 fps then I think you might have bigger issues than rolling shutter in certain scenarios.Since I'm not an experienced/pro sports photographer, no, I'm not sure. But from what I can tell, a pro-level sports body would have the following above & beyond the S1RII:
Me neither. But I am curious as what's missing. Personally, I don't see a stacked sensor as imperative. It brings its own set of compromises along with it, about the only real advantage I can see is the faster readout, but if you can't get your shot at 10 fps then I think you might have bigger issues than rolling shutter in certain scenarios.
It's small, at least for 40 fps. I think it's good for about 3 seconds. And given that the pre-cap is 1.5 seconds, that doesn't give much time for after you press the trigger. Also, it takes a long time to empty the buffer, and you can't start shooting again until it's clear. Just like the G9II. So you grab three seconds of action and then have to wait 15 seconds or so. Not good, at least for a pro. Now at 20 fps it becomes more workable. But still you have to wait. Anyway, you asked why people believe there is still room in the L-mount lineup for a pro sports body, and this, I believe, is one of them.Buffer -It don't even know what the S1R 2 is to be perfectly honest
Yes, agree on everything there.I think the less comprehensive lineup of super tele's in L mount would be the bigger hurdle myself, but it looks like Sigma is addressing that, at prices that aren't out of reach even for a serious amateur. I think one would be a bit harsh to criticise them for that however, as you start getting into the chicken/egg scenario.
And a few of mine.Just a few of my thoughts
I do not think that the S1Rii is "good enough" for high demanding sport photographers.
I would be suprised if the second generation of PDAF Lumix cameras would be fast and accurate enough to compete with others for i.e. the Olympic games. But we will see that soon, once the first users have one.
The buffer is the bigger problem. Look at the Buffet video of Richard. No matter in which setting, the S1Rii first pushes all images in the buffer and only after the buffer is full, it writes the images on the card.
The Lumix G9ii does the same, by the way. See the video of Emily for this. It always takes the S1Rii around 20 seconds to write the images on the card, no matter how many images.
Panasonic markets the S1Rii as a hybrid camera with high MP, not as a sport camera. At least not until now. There is nothing wrong with that. It costs a lot less than the competition, incl. sport cameras for pros. It does not need to be perfect for every use case.
I have some topics already mentioned here before, but also simple just looking at my OM1 from Olympus (which is already some years old…)Are you sure? Where do you think the S1R mkII is lacking?
While I agree that 40 fps is ridiculous for most cases, it's not the frame that is the concern (at least for me). It's the distortion/warping that occurs with an electronic shutter on a slow(ish) sensor. I don't want a warped bird or race car.I tried doing some bird photography years ago with an Olympus EM1.2. Even at 15fps using electronic shutter (with a read-out speed of 1/60s) and being careful not to press for too long, I came back with way, way, way too many images. I got some decent shots but overall, I didn't find photos of birds that interesting as an "art form". I also couldn't detect any noticable rolling shutter effects.
It seems to me that crazy high frame rates for stills photography is definitely a very specialised requirement (hummingbirds perhaps). I would think that any half-decent photographer should be able to do serious sports and wildlife with the S1Rii.