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Canon 7d firmware 2.0.6 review
Canon 7d firmware 2.0.6 review




We were given no additional insight into what we haven’t been told. Apparently, there’s more to come with the RF mount that has yet to be revealed to the world. There has also been talk that an EOS R replacement for the EOS 7D Mark II will require the RF mount to meet target focusing speed and accuracy. Canon already has an APS-C mirrorless lineup with the EOS M, and they’ve said that the RF mount is for their full frame mirrorless system. Canon Rumors suggests that a 7D Mark II replacement might actually be an APS-C EOS R model. Mirrorless is a real thing now and Canon is focusing a lot of their attention towards their EOS R lineup. The camera landscape is different now to how it was in 2014-2016. But rather than Canon developing something today that’s as groundbreaking as the D500 was in 2016, they look set to just abandon the line altogether. That the series has just gotten good enough that it can, mostly, effectively replace the next model up. So we may see with an 80D replacement what we saw with the Nikon D90 replacement. The D7x00 series is why Nikon had to really push the boat out with the D500. Many even lauded the D7000 as “the” D300s replacement (it wasn’t). It had many of the qualities of the “Pro” Nikon D300s a lower price tag and it offered 1080p 24fps video with full manual control. We also saw this with Nikon when many decided to forget waiting for a Nikon D300s replacement in favour of the D7000 – the D90 replacement.

canon 7d firmware 2.0.6 review

I really expected Canon to have announced a 7D Mark III by now, but bowing out of the “Pro crop body” race to concentrate on mirrorless isn’t necessarily a bad move, although it might upset existing 7D Mark II shooters.īut then, the next series down Canon’s product lineup is getting pretty advanced, too. Then the Nikon D500 came along in early 2016 and I rarely saw people talking about the 7D Mark II anymore. The Nikon never came, and the 7D Mark II essentially became the new king of APS-C DSLRs.

canon 7d firmware 2.0.6 review

It was announced in September 2014, about the same time as Nikon users were expecting a D400 to come along. It’s a little surprising to me, but also not, that Canon is killing off the 7D line. Canon has apparently told a couple of dealers that this concern will be addressed sometime later in 2019. We have been told that a few dealers and distributors are a bit worried about what Canon has in store for the replacement to the popular EOS 7D Mark II, as those buyers also buy lenses, more than EOS 80D buyers do.






Canon 7d firmware 2.0.6 review