(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Sony Alpha 7S Review: Digital Photography Review
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20150419155319/http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/sony-alpha-7-s
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Sony Alpha 7S Review

Review based on production Sony a7S

The a7S is the third model in Sony's full-frame mirrorless lineup, a 12MP camera that puts as much emphasis on its movie capture capabilities as its still image prowess. While the a7S is a capable still shooter, Sony has emphasized that its real focus (no pun intended) is videography.

The first thing you need to know about the a7S is that it can record 1080p footage internally or be used to output 4K video to an external recorder. The internal 1080p footage is recorded using the XAVC S format, a more consumer-friendly version of Sony's XAVC system. This is the first of the company's cameras to use the format, which frees the camera from the bitrate restrictions of the AVCHD standard.

However, while the a7S's body exactly resembles its original 24 and 36MP sister models, the a7 and a7R (the a7 II's design is slightly different), it includes a whole raft of features and tools to support the videographer. These include the low contrast S-Log2 tone curve that allows more of the camera's dynamic range to be fitted into its video files and the option to record time code. Photographers more interested in stills may wish to note that most of these video features have subsequently been included in the newer a7 II, which also features revised ergonomics and in-body image stabilization.

Key Features

  • 12MP full-frame EXMOR CMOS sensor
  • Focuses at light levels to -4EV
  • 1080 footage at up to 50Mbps (XAVC S)
  • Extensive movie-focused capture options: S-Log2, Black Level, time code
  • Video ISO Range 100 - 409,600
  • Uncompressed 4:2:2 Full HD and 4K video output over HDMI
  • 2.36M dot OLED viewfinder
  • Mic and headphone sockets
  • 720/120p option for slow-mo capture
  • Wi-Fi with NFC

DSLRs capable of shooting HD video have existed for a little under six years. Prior to the Canon EOS 5D Mark II, which demonstrated that you could get near-professional quality video from a stills camera, video seemed to be included on cameras primarily to satisfy a checkbox on the marketing spec sheet. It has subsequently become a critical feature for many users.

For the most part, however, modern DSLRs and mirroless cameras don't offer much support for their video features. The technical capability is there, but even on cameras where a decent level of manual control is provided, tools such as focus peaking and zebra patterhsn that have been standard on dedicated video cameras for many years are often missing. This extends even to cameras such as the Canon 5D Mark II and Nikon D800, whose respective manufacturers are happy to promote video features despite the fact that support for actually using video is somewhat lacking. Canon has subsequently upped its game with the EOS 5D Mark III and the lessons it's learning from the development of its Cinema EOS line, but in general video is promoted much better than it's supported.

The Sony a7S steps around these pitfalls, offering both focus peaking and zebra highlight warnings to help videographers get footage that lives up to the cameras' capture capabilities (you can, however, purchase external monitors that can show the same information on other cameras). They also have add-on accessories available to allow use of industry-standard audio or video connections.

Another shortcoming of many 'HDSLR's is that they capture the relatively low resolutions of video by only sampling 'stripes' of their sensors - a process that's become known as line-skipping. This leads to lower vertical resolution in the video, along with a greater risk of moiré. The a7S avoids this by reading out its entire sensor thirty times per second. And, because its sensor appears to have been designed with video in mind, it's able to intelligently downscale this output into cleaner, more detailed video.

However, just because they go to unusual lengths to accommodate the videographer, this doesn't mean any compromises have been made to the feature sets they offer the stills shooter. Noticeably, the Sony offers the same handling and controls as its more stills orientated a7 and a7R models.

Here's how the a7S sits in Sony's a7 lineup:

  Sony a7S Sony a7 II Sony a7R
Sensor specifications 12MP full-frame
24MP full-frame 36MP full-frame
Video formats XAVC S, AVCHD, MP4 XAVC S, AVCHD, MP4 XAVC S, AVCHD
Highest bitrate 50Mbps (1080p) 50Mbps (1080p) 28Mbps (1080p)
ISO Range (Stills)
Standard / Expanded
100 - 102,400
50 - 409,600
100 - 25,600
50 - 25,600
100 - 25,600
50 - 25,600
ISO Range (Movies) 200 - 102,400
200 - 409,600
200 - 25,600 200 - 25,600
Image Stabilization In-lens only In-body In-lens only
S-Log2 picture profile Yes Yes No
Electronic first curtain shutter Yes Yes No
Battery life (CIPA) 360 350 340
Weight 489g
559g 465g


If you're new to digital photography you may wish to read the Digital Photography Glossary before diving into this article (it may help you understand some of the terms used).

Conclusion / Recommendation / Ratings are based on the opinion of the reviewer, you should read the ENTIRE review before coming to your own conclusions.

We recommend to make the most of this review you should be able to see the difference (at least) between X,Y and Z and ideally A,B and C.

This article is Copyright 2015 and may NOT in part or in whole be reproduced in any electronic or printed medium without prior permission from the author.

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195
I own it
365
I want it
45
I had it
Discuss in the forums

Comments

Total comments: 474
123
avijit1974

how we can shoot with pal version of this camera with an external 4k recorder with 24p?

0 upvotes
brendon1000

Sorry posted incorrectly

Comment edited 44 seconds after posting
0 upvotes
Valiant Thor

Most customer reviews including on the Sony site are not good. Horrible rolling shutter during video is one big complaint. I'm waiting to see what the A7r MII specs look like.

0 upvotes
WanderingEYE

Pretty much useless as a stills camera with only 12 MP.
Must be some kind of inverted snobbishness at work here, an "exclusive" camera for artists perhaps?
Not even real 4k.
The NX1 is a much better movie making tool, it has a touch screen too which is particularly useful for documentary shooting in unpredictable situations.

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 5 minutes after posting
3 upvotes
Slaginfected

Good thing that nowadays one can pick from so many options. I for myself am happy with the A7s. Together with small manual lenses this thing is compact and lightweight, can handle everything from bright daylight to dark small clubs, has an absolutely silent shutter (if needed), and is able to dish out quality video if needed (emphasis on quality, not usability). Horses for courses, so to speak.

BTW, snobbishness is using a 36MPix camera and publishing all of that as maybe max. 1.5MPix on the net. Extra points for using it solely to make cat pictures :)

Comment edited 35 seconds after posting
19 upvotes
BarnET

"The NX1 is a much better movie making tool"
highly debateable.

6 upvotes
siyamalan

Totally agree with you.

This camera uselessly allows me to shoot at f4 or smaller in terrible low light conditions. Hate having that autofocus in low light as well. who needs it?

Having a higher dynamic range above iso 400 over every other camera ever manufactured is an absolute useless feature.

Even terrible, I could shoot milky way time lapses under sub zero degrees in less than 20 minutes. Damn! All the struggle and the enjoyment of getting ourself frozen by staying beside the camera for 4-5 hrs.. everything gone!

Hate that this camera churns out usable picture even at 12800.

HDR is such an art and I hate that this camera can gives all those details in a single image.

Most importantly the file sizes. Bigger the better. isn't it

Hate everything about this camera. Why Sony? why did you make this camera in the first place.

Comment edited 41 seconds after posting
14 upvotes
panpen

"Pretty much useless as a stills camera with only 12 MP"

There you go! Another dpreview pro that needs 38475838493 megapixels to print 4x6 and post on Facebook

10 upvotes
Viramati

I only use this camera for stills photography and I t would take me to long to list all the reasons why. a superlative picture making tool

5 upvotes
tecnoworld

12mp are not much, I agree. I often crop my pictures, since I don't always have a zoom lens with me. Besides I use to print in 60x40 cm size.

But if you don't crop and print smaller (or never print) then 12mp are enough.

0 upvotes
_Federico_

60X40 ? Lol... From my D3 I've just printed from an 8 mp file a 100X100 cm fine art, absolutely perfect. 12 mp are absolutely good for every kind of work.

0 upvotes
EvilTed

Wanderingeye, absolutely not. I shot most of my images on a 3 week trip to Myamar using the A7s.

aliveinhere.tumblr.com

The A7s is a fantastic stills camera and I prefer it to the A7 II, Leica M 240 and Leica M Monochrom which I also own...

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 7 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
tecnoworld

Federico: not to my eyes, sorry.

0 upvotes
Lorena Snow

I love this due to is Features :)

0 upvotes
dinisohbetler

gerçekten harika bişey bu.

1 upvote
noiseky

I wish I can afford it. Or maybe wait for one year when the price decreases.

0 upvotes
jonneymendoza

I just ordered this camera. In regards to DR range being inferior to a7r etc, indeed it is slightly inferior from iso 100-200.

Once it reached ISO 400, it becomes even and then ISO 1600+ the A7S pulls away from every camera around .

For me i can live with that slight loss of DR from iso 100-400 as the DR is still far better then my Canon 5D3.

However, when Canon decide to release DR that supasses sony's ones, i will invest a full body DSLR again for landscape work.

What put me off an A7R was due to the fact that it quite a noisy camera ie shutter noise. It also doesnt focus that well in low light compared to the a7s.

i do like how it has 36MP to play and slightly better DR on the low ISO but because i wanted a small compact camera where i can throw in my bag and even take it with me on a night out etc, this was more of an all rounder for me whilst the a7r is more of a specific camera much like the canon 5ds/R is.

4 upvotes
jonneymendoza

Looking forward to playing with mirrorless camera's as i believe if you give it another 5-10 years, it will surpass DSLR's in almost every way.

Matter if fact, if A7s mk2 used the a6000 AF, then we would have a camera that can go toe to toe with many DSLR in not only IQ, but AF

2 upvotes
siyamalan

True that. A7s has higher dynamic range beyond iso 400 over every other camera that has been rated by dxomark

Comment edited 1 minute after posting
2 upvotes
ConfuciusTse

I've had my A7s since July and love it. For me, the higher ISO is critical to get keepers as I'm often shooting in lower light and fast shutter speeds. If you can of course it's better to get the optimal camera body for each application. But in my case, I want something that I know will deliver consistently in a very broad range of light situations. Also the auto white balance is pretty good so I don't have to go RAW unless I'm doing something really critical. The negatives of the A7s are low priorities to me so I readily trade them out including lower resolution and slightly lower dynamic range at ISO 100.

All that being said, would love if v2 gets the in-body stabilization, a touchscreen for focusing and UI, and some more range of motion for the LCD screen. Faster AF a la A6000 please too. Overall I'm quite happy with this camera.

1 upvote
Anahi Everett

Good Features 12MP full-frame EXMOR CMOS sensor

0 upvotes
d2f

On the subject Sony full frame lenses, where are the Loxia lenses listed on DPReview? I tried both the Sony and Zeiss lens directories and could not find them listed. Thank you in advance.

0 upvotes
Denialisnotariver

Personally I would rather see how things look pushing 1, 2, or 3 stops using various ISO settings and not some target of 6400. I recall my 6D seems to have a stop and a half ability at ISO 800 that still looked reasonable in the shadows. Seeing one stop push from 200 Vs. 400 and the like would be more intersting to me. I fail to see how looking at the comparison of ISO 6400 as the target ISO is very useful given that noise is always more likely there in low light. To me varying the base ISO and then pushing that a few stops would seem more telling,but then the testing illumination would of course have to change. Using low ISO settings and decreasing light and increased exposure times would be intersting too.

1 upvote
Rishi Sanyal

Thanks for your feedback. We are now starting to push base ISO shots 1, 2, 3 EV, etc. to answer, hopefully, the question you're after. Even then, though, our tests still won't be comprehensive, since it's not the # of stops of pushing that is the relevant question here, but rather which tones are able to be pushed. This is a subtle point, but an important one. When a camera has a high read noise floor (e.g. 5D Mark III), tones that fall anywhere near it are the ones that can't be pushed. Tones well above this floor, though, can be pushed 3, 4, 5, 6 or however many stops without showing much difference compared to a camera with a low (downstream) read noise floor.

To get at the other question you're asking - pushes of other ISOs, our ISO-invariance test is actually a good proxy as it shows you the ISO beyond which there's no more benefit to performing the gain by increasing ISO in-camera. Doing it in post, of course, allows you to preserve significantly more highlight tone.

0 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

Btw our new test showing the result of other base ISO pushes are in the E-M5 II review, & look for it in future reviews (a7 II, for example).

With the 6D, btw, a stop and a half EV push sounds perfectly reasonable, but again - it's which tone you're pushing that matters. By ISO 800, actually, you won't have many tones near/below the noise floor b/c every tone has been amplified 8x relative to base ISO. Hence, only the really, really dimmest of tones will still be below the (relatively high) downstream read noise floor of the 6D, and so you'll generally find pushes to be more reasonable. You can actually analyze this yourself here.

0 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

There's still some noise even in the shadows there at ISO 800 after the push (relative to ISO 6400), so you are still paying a bit of a noise cost, and that's exactly what that test is designed to show.

It's just that it's a small noise cost, at that point, b/c so many tones have been pushed above the downstream read noise floor by ISO amplification, that the downstream read noise has less and less impact.

That's why you find the pushes reasonable at higher ISOs on the 6D. The point of our ISO-invariance test, though, is to show you even the faintest bit of noise cost you might be paying by pushing ISO X by Y EV instead of just dialing in ISO (X + Y EV) in-camera.

0 upvotes
rinkos

i would like for that sum to at least get a 10fps camera ..whats so hard about doing that ?

0 upvotes
Prime_Lens

I agree, you should develop one and show them how it is done.

6 upvotes
IKnowin

Funny reply but as someone who owns an A7s I fail to see why 10fps should not be possible from hardware that, in other Sony cameras with far greater pixels to record, manages up to 12fps.

More importantly why is the large still button disable in video mode forcing you to use the joke reset sized record button on the camera ?

2 upvotes
Mike FL

From what I can see that SONY puts itself in a bad position from its own innovation - too many products lines.

By using A7x and A7-2 for example, SONY *should* have two Lens line for:
- One line with OIS
- One line without OIS

OIS can be disabled, or IBIS can be partially being disabled for using lens' OIS.

BUT same SPECed OIS lenses are larger and expensive than lens without OIS, and the extra cost will be added up fast as we buy more and more OIS lenses. It is system camera, not P&S like RX1, RX10, RX100 lines.

BAD. is it not?

2 upvotes
R Stacy

No. I don't think its bad. One OIS or not OIS, this or that, really? Sony is evolving quite nicely, incredibly in fact. 5 axis IBIS is a recent development probably from their association with Olympus. Not a bad thing. I wouldn't mind seeing non OIS lenses in the future, now, but they are pushing the industry and leaving many in the dust to play catch up. Perfect systems? No, not yet. But they're working on it hard and fast and I applaud their top shelf efforts.

11 upvotes
Mike FL

I like IBIS better than OIS b/c lenses are small and cheaper.

The BAD part is that A7-2 does NOT have popular FL none OIS zoom lenses for example. not even in the lenses road map.

6 upvotes
R Stacy

As an old Olympus user and still fan I've always thought IBIS was the smart move. Hopefully Zeiss and Sony are working on this message. It took Olympus more than a couple years to get into lens development after the E-1.

If Sony is going to get serious towards E mount, they'll have to and recent developments suggest they are moving in that direction. Not soon enough is the catch phrase for now.

0 upvotes
Mike FL

As a system camera that weather sealed Olympus OMD line is much better b/c its F2.8 Pro weather sealed zooms, it has 3 in total including the 7-14mm UWA will be soon released.

No other brands' mirror-less have these weather sealed faster zooms, UWA, WA and TELE.

Comment edited 21 seconds after posting
3 upvotes
R Stacy

Problem with your argument being you are dealing with a 4/3 sensor vs. a full frame sensor. Yes 2.8 is faster, but you'll get even less DOF with f4 on a FF. And the better Sony's are weather sealed.

1 upvote
Mike FL

@R Stacy;

Yea, M43 sensor is also kind of too small for low-light based on the current sensor performance.

Rumored a7000 [will have IBIS] is weather sealed with new [Zeiss?] weather sealed zoom, we will see.

For me, I'm looking for a system camera with 2 zoom, UWA and WA, and WA zoom has to be started @24mm. I need IS, and prefer IBIS for the reason I mentioned early.

Comment edited 2 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
D Webb

Excuse me, did someone really just claim that a FF sensor optimized for low noise at high ISO is inferior to a micro four thirds camera due to the difference between one or two lenses of one stop?
That is really desperate

0 upvotes
EcoPix

Could someone inform whether any of these cameras can do simultaneous stills while videoing, like the Nikon V-cameras can, and some GH-cameras?

That is, a still capture or burst (pressing the shutter release) while videoing, with no effect on the video.

What is the point of a fusion of stills and vid if we can't do both at the same time? We are increasingly asked to do this by our customers/users.

If they can't, I'm wondering why not. Is there a technical constraint? Obviously SLRs can't, but a mirrorless with electronic shutter should be able to.

It seems such an obvious requirement of a stills/video hybrid camera.

Many thanks, and apologies if this has been covered. I've looked around without success.

1 upvote
keeponkeepingon

Great question! Just about every point and shoot and my EOS-M do this but I was very surprised/disappointed that my A6000 won't let me take a picture while filimg

1 upvote
kai liu

I did not see you mention this. and it is important. 1080p full frame mode is pretty useless at 50/60p. It produce too much moire and aliasing. However at aps-c mode at 50p/60p. This is much reduced and perfect usable. So if one need 50p/60p slow motion, he better give up full frame mode and stick with aps-c mode.

Comment edited 50 seconds after posting
0 upvotes
Thematic

Not true. Eoshd and dozens of other websites have clearly shown very little Moire and Aliasing in 1080. Thats the whole point of the 12mp sensor and how it does its readout.

Nothing comes close to it for video for the price.

https://vimeo.com/105690274 (one excellent example)

7 upvotes
Lucas_

Not with the A7S! The full sensor readout and low pixel density are some of the great features that prevent those problems. The A7S is a landmark, having "raised the bar" quite higher than ever for video with this type of camera.

4 upvotes
panpen

"1080p full frame mode is pretty useless at 50/60p"

Ok, Mr Spielberg

0 upvotes
GaryJP

I have been very tempted to go the A7II route, but I have to say the reports of cooked raws, plus my own experience that Sony raws are not as flexible as others', concerns me.

http://www.rawdigger.com/howtouse/sony-craw-arw2-posterization-detection

5 upvotes
Camley

Give way to your temptation and you will pleasantly surprised by the A7II's excellent image quality.

0 upvotes
GaryJP

Think I am going to wait.

3 upvotes
panpen

Gary, those Facebook snaps you post require at last 14 bit raw

0 upvotes
GaryJP

You might want to do the usual troll thing of having no gallery before you talk, as you so often do, about others who shoot for professional use requiring good cameras for "Facebook snaps".

2 upvotes
Pitchertaker

Trying to choose my first digital SLR to upgrade from my Canon Powershot 40 2MP point-and-shoot, which I love but have advanced enough to want something more powerful and full featured.

I'd like some advice if possible in choosing a make/model based on the types of photography I enjoy, and what you think would serve me best for such subject matter: nature, landscape/cityscape, portraits, street/candid, macro, winter, B&W, flora/fauna, architecture/perspective.

Been looking at the Sony A7, A7s, A7r, and the Alpha a-6000; Olympus OM-D E-M1 and Nikon D7100.

0 upvotes
EcoPix

I think you would be over the moon with any of those cameras. You could probably save yourself a lot of money by getting a D3200 twin lens kit or equivalent, which you would also be over the moon with and would address all your areas of interest.

Add an extension tube, a polarising filter, an external flash, a tripod, a remote release, a nifty fifty, a small backpack camera bag and possibly a GPS unit and 35mm 1.8 lens, and you would be ready to take on the world for less than the cost of an A7 body.

But of course it's entirely up to you - whatever grabs you will work. They all surpass us mere photographers.

0 upvotes
EcoPix

But be warned - you'll miss your point-and-shoot. You'll go through a period of saying, "I would have made a better shot with my old camera." You'll either get through it or trade it all in on an FZ200.

2 upvotes
Lucas_

Grab an A6000 with the 16-50 and 18-135 f4 lenses and you'll be in heaven for some time and won't miss your p&s. After that, there'll be no limits for you!

Comment edited 2 minutes after posting
1 upvote
Pitchertaker

TYFYR. You don't mean the kit lens, do you? People kvetch about it. From Sony's site: R U referring to DT16-50 f/2.8 SSM (SAL1650) instead? Can't find a Zeiss 18-135 f4 but did find DT18-135 f/3.5-5.6 (SAL18135) are these Zeiss lenses everyone's raving about? Drooling over the Zeiss 90mm f/2.8 macro coming out but must set some hay aside to throw down the $1K needed to pick one up.

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 1 minute after posting
0 upvotes
nawknai

So.....you shoot nearly every type of photography? ;) Also, I don't know what your definition of "street photography" is, but have you managed to get the street photography results you're after using your Canon p&s? Just curious.

Personally, I don't know what to tell you, since you're interested in so much (which is good), but I think anything would be OK for you at this point. Sorry, but all the cameras you mentioned are extremely capable, so pick up any of them and get great results in most cases. Buy the most well-priced option, or wait for a sale and let that decide your fate.

If you want more specific advice, then you'll need to either narrow down your interests to be more specific, or tell us which focal lengths you're most interested in shooting.

On that last note, I"m not sure if you know which focal length is if you're coming from a point and shoot! Do you know if you mostly shoot wide, or do you zoom in a lot?

Also, what's your budget???

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 3 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
Pitchertaker

I mention several types seeking advice for a good "overall use" set up. Street stuff is mostly candid work. Narrowed down my favorite subject matter is B&W, land/cityscape, nature, and macro. Would love learning how to photograph the Milky Way and, if I ever got good enough to earn money for it, portraiture.

I'm aware of focal length. I'll need a "fast" (F/1.4/1.8) wide angle (17-24mm?) for landscapes; 35-50mm for portraits and a medium range zoom or prime telephoto for nature. As I already have three manual focus Zuikos (50mm f/1.8; 35-70mm f/4; 85-250 f5) and want to use them I guess I should opt for the Sony Alpha a-6000 with a metabones adapter and then obtain Sony-Zeiss 90mm f/2.8 macro and one of the fast E-mount wide angles. Your thoughts?

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 4 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
tecnoworld

Two basic questions to dpr:

1) which sw did you use to manipulate raw in the new tests?
2) will you be doing these new tests fir all the new cameras you test? (I hope so!)

1 upvote
Rishi Sanyal

1) ACR/Lightroom 2) We hope so, when it's relevant, anyway!

1 upvote
tecnoworld
0 upvotes
RC

The 7S is a great camera, I used it during last new year's eve without a flash and the resulting photos are just amazing.
HOWEVER: What I am missing, from an amateur's photographer point of view, is a decently fast zoom lens (24-105 or 18-200 mm).

0 upvotes
CaPi

So do I :-) I Would very much like to buy a 7s but am hestitant due to the lenses offered.

0 upvotes
d2f

I agree there is a serious lack of lenses and if it were not for the third party adapters I could not recommend purchasing the a7S. Speaking from personal experience with the adapters and a good selection of manual and AF lenses, the lack of Sony lenses is not a issue. If I were in the market for additional lenses the high sensitivity of the a7s no longer forces me to buy fast lenses. Another reason I purchased the camera is for astrophotography. This is where the a7s really out performs all the other cameras I have, since it enables me to accurately focus on stars that I cannot see with my eyes in the sky with heavy light pollution. With a push of a programmed button I can magnify the field of view to such a degree that the slightest touch of the focusing knob makes the faintest stars appear, and another touch they disappear. The result of accurate focusing and a light sensitive camera is very rewarding to me.

Comment edited 15 minutes after posting
2 upvotes
RC

Well, the Sony SEL-24240 is available now. Not cheap but definitely worth getting as a travel zoom. Ordered mine today.

0 upvotes
CaPi

=) I read that too. Any reviews on the lens yet? =)

0 upvotes
alpha604

Regarding the DR & RAW comparison at the end of the review... whille the compressed raw files warrant review, the DPReview test is also flawed by not using the base ISO values for each CMOS sensor.

The higher exposure latitude or dynamic range possible will be available while utilizing the image sensors at their native base setting. For the A7R it is somewhere between 100-160, while the A7S is 3200. If you aren't flexing the A7S at 3200 you are crippling the range it will be able to reproduce. In the interest of squeezing the most in terms of DR from these cameras proper respect is also needed for how the components are designed.

We often assume that the lowest ISO (native) is best, and it generally is. However the test images were shot at ISO100. You wouldn't seriously test cameras for comparison via extended ISO settings would you? Use the accurate native ISO of the image sensors or else you are comparing apples to oranges.

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 1 minute after posting
0 upvotes
Richard Butler

Our testing (and DxO's) lead us to the conclusion that ISO 100 is the base ISO, in the sense that it appears to utilize the minimal level of amplification and offer the maximum DR.

What leads you to the conclusion that it's ISO 3200, so that we can test our findings?

4 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

Had we shot a proper dynamic range test using ETTR methodology with the a7S at ISO 3200 and the a7R at ISO 100, the a7S would do even worse than it did in our shootout of the cameras at ISO 100. It'd have lost yet another stop or so of dynamic range.

Our wedge shots verify the camera has less dynamic range at ISO 3200 than at ISO 100, which is absolutely expected, as base ISO maps a full pixel well to white in the digital Raw file. Higher ISOs map a less-than-full-pixel-well to white, which can help get lower tones further away from the noise floor, but never as much as it'll hurt the brighter tones that are thrown away b/c they exceed the max signal the ADC has been optimized to map to white.

The bigger question is: where are folks getting the notion that ISO 100 to ISO 1600 are 'extended' settings on the a7S?

They absolutely are not.

0 upvotes
chrisfromalaska

Maybe there's a little confusion - the base ISO for the SLOG gamma when shooting video is 3200. That's not the case when shooting stills.

3 upvotes
CaPi

I am confused by this :D
I usa an x-series fuji als small camera due to its comparatively very good high iso performance - with prime lenses. I want to get a full frame for the times when can take along a camera bag.. go beyond what I can due with the aps-c. Will the 7s be even better at performing @ high iso?

Comment edited 3 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
armandino

Question to Mirrorless experts:
I recently considered to add to my cameras collection a mirrorless but I could not find out how you can keep your lens wide open while setting a small diaphragm. In other words, when I work in studio, I do not want to preview the exposure but set the exposure for the flashes, to say f11 while having a bright image on the screen with the modelling lights. Can all mirrorless do that? which ones do?
Thanx!

0 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

Oh boy, you're opening a can of worms there :) We're interested in this very topic b/c we feel that the Sony cameras' reticence to open up the aperture when acquiring AF cripples it in low light and for continuous AF, since focusing at a smaller aperture means less light and more DOF (so increased range of hunting).

But the behavior becomes rather convoluted once you try to factor in the amount of light the camera is 'seeing', the selected aperture, and the setting you have 'Live View Display' set to (Settings Effect On/Off). For Sony cameras, that is.

I'm having a hard time recalling other mirrorless cameras' behaviors at the moment, but we'll keep an eye out. Most DSLRs do what you're asking for though.

My best guess as to why some manufacturers do this: to avoid focus shift. But I can't imagine that's a big enough problem that you should always try to focus at/near the selected aperture, especially since DOF increases as you stop down anyway, masking focus shift.

0 upvotes
armandino

Thank you Rishi, I am considering indeed to get a Sony, I have to try that in the store. It will not be its primary use, but it would be nice to be able to :-)

0 upvotes
vin 13

I've wondered the same thing. Working with studio flashes is perhaps the main reason I still have a Canon kit in addition to my M43 gear. With mirror less, shooting products you can increase the ISO to see what you're doing and set the focus, then decrease it for the shot. It certainly wouldn't work for people though! With M43 you don't need the power so perhaps continuous lighting of some kind is better suited, but for a FF mirrorless it's another matter. If someone has a way around I'd love to hear.

0 upvotes
jimkahnw

I've been using the Olympus OMD for a little over a year, switching from Nikon--and will not go back. There is a setting to turn off exposure preview so the EVF stays bright, even though the exposure is for the flash and the subject is lit with modeling lights or the room light many stops lower.

The first time is used the camera on assignment, I didn't know how to change this setting and the view finder was almost completely dark. I was guessing my compositions, but I pleased the client--and that's what really counts.

2 upvotes
Timbukto

Sony A6000 has a setting for Liveview to just leave aperture wide open or not, I can't imagine the A7S doesn't have it.

Also Rishi I was wondering about effect of C-AF as well with 'simulated' liveview modes, but the behavior of the A6000 at least is not so simple...if you *want* a narrow aperture and the camera doesn't feel it has enough light it will open up the aperture further...the question then would obviously be in dynamic moving situations, having the camera take action to open up the aperture further will probably lose some keepers compared to just keeping it open all the time. In situations where there is enough light it probably doesn't matter, but in low light situations where you want a stopped down image, I imagine it would be to your advantage to not use simulated liveview (i forgot what they call it exactly).

Comment edited 2 minutes after posting
2 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

Oh, actually, I think I misinterpreted your question. I thought you were interested in the aperture staying wide open, but you're more interested in a usable preview even when your exposure is set such that sans flash, you'd get a dark exposure.

In that case, yes, Sony does have a way of just keeping the preview at a reasonable brightness. You just set "Live View Display: Settings Effect OFF".

However, Timbukto - on Sony cameras, setting this to 'Off' does not actually mean the aperture stays wide open, since the aperture will close down if the camera 'thinks' the scene is bright. It'll then open/close the aperture to your selected aperture when acquiring focus, unless it thinks it needs to open it up b/c it's too dark, or close it down b/c it's too bright (to avoid saturation).

From there it gets really complicated really fast (as you say), as this behavior changes based on if the setting is 'on' or 'off'. I personally think the algorithms need some serious work.

1 upvote
Rishi Sanyal

Also, you say 'if the camera doesn't feel it has enough light it will open up the aperture further' - that's exactly where the problem lies, b/c the camera's algorithm for determining if it 'feels it has enough light' needs to be more conservative. Often it think it has enough light, but it doesn't - not enough to focus fast, anyway, so focus slows down. You then have to literally shut off like all the lights to get it to open up the aperture all the way. So at best, it's slowing itself down; at worst, it causes itself to fail.

Furthermore, not opening up the aperture means extended DOF, which means the camera has to search a wider range to detect focus. This becomes particularly egregious at smaller apertures. Say you want to ensure an erratically moving subject is absolutely in focus as it's running, and you're moving alongside it as well. You may wish to choose F8 for a higher hit rate. But the AF would be slowed due to DOF.

And no 'Live View Display' setting gets around this.

0 upvotes
Timbukto

The setting on the A6000 works fine because of the APS-C sensor combined with only f1.8 primes, etc and its PDAF capabilities. I can see where this becomes an issue on a FF sensor without PDAF capabilities.

So this setting that you find 'awkward' on the A7S works acceptably well on the A6000. I can see how a CDAF FF camera with such shallow DOF capability has enough difficulty to work with that the live view display settings are less than optimal (but perhaps CDAF on a FF sensor is already less than optimal).

Also with the A6000 setting the liveview settings effect off has in real-world circumstances has *always* given me wide open apertures in liveview and AF, but again I can see that this may differ with the A7S which perhaps has an extremely photosensitive sensor combined with a stop or so more light gathering for its available f1.8 primes.

Settings effect off does the trick for me with the A6000. I can see how it may be different on the A7S due to its lack of PDAF, etc.

Comment edited 4 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

"Also with the A6000 setting the liveview settings effect off has in real-world circumstances has always given me wide open apertures in liveview and AF"

Interesting, I'll have to recheck that.

Remember though that with any given f-stop prime, the light per unit area is the same, so the a7S' pixels shouldn't be any more prone to saturate than the a6000's. As long as the FWC/pixel size ratio remains the same between the two cameras.

Yes CDAF is particularly susceptible to underperforming with stopped down apertures (b/c of the need to hunt more), but I'd imagine so are PDAF systems. Isn't there a smaller phase difference between 'left-looking' & 'right-looking' on-sensor PDAF pixels at smaller aperture? Perhaps this is balanced with sharper overall detail for the phase difference algorithms? Still, though, I'd imagine there's some crippling due to less light.

In fact, I'm impressed the a7 II continues to PDAF in well-lit interiors down to F8. Give it a couple generations and...

0 upvotes
Mike FL

It is interesting to see that the newer SONY A7-2 seems one stop noisy than older A7s in high ISO in the DPR's LAB testing results.

Not good.

0 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

That's b/c it's likely the same sensor as the a7. The a7S pulls ahead even more at really high ISOs.

1 upvote
armandino

Is this turning into a Videocamera review site?
Glad to see an excellently performing full frame as a 4K videocamera. However it is a heavily handicapped expensive still camera, far from an all-round performer yet it gains a whopping 86% and gold award. I am starting departing from Dpreview opinions lately.

9 upvotes
Joe fotosiamo

Not all camera has to be an all-around performers. There is nothing wrong with a camera that is a specialist, whether it is high-end, high megapixel stills camera like Phase One or Hasselblad medium formats, or a video-oriented cameras like the Sony a7S and the Panasonic GH4.

And not everyone share your lack of enthusiasm for video. I for one have been venturing more and more into filmmaking in addition to stills, and the lines between stills and video has been blurred more and more ever since the introduction of the Canon 5D to the cinema world.

So kudos to DPReview for not ignoring an important segment in the camera world.

3 upvotes
armandino

Other cameras have been heavily penalized in the past for being specialized. I have not problem with giving full marks to a well designed specialized camera, I do have a problem when this is applied inconsistently. In this specific case it is even most obvious as this is more a video dedicated camera than a still camera, so again, it is even more of a problem in my eyes. For as still photographer it is really hard to justify to shell out this kind of money on a very limited still camera with limited lens selection. Even for a videographer I think it is hard to justify, because good 4K options will be readily available very soon, this camera will lose its marked value so fast. Poor investment unless somebody needs good 4K now and cannot wait.

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 12 minutes after posting
4 upvotes
glarry

For Armandino, A7s isn't only a very good video camera, is THE BEST camera for low light. Check the dxomark to convince your self. Also no shutter noisy, it makes it ideal for concerts shots.

11 upvotes
armandino

"Best" is a qualitative expression. If the "Best" low light camera marginally edges other excellent cameras in the usable iso range holding you back in pixel count and AF performance it is a niche application, sorry. Especially when the system also suffers from limited lens choice. Electronic shutter is a nice touch indeed. Excellent iso performance and quite shutter do not make a gold and 86% to my taste if the rest is mediocre from a still point of view (we are talking of still cameras here right?)

Comment edited 3 times, last edit 3 minutes after posting
2 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

We debated for a long time whether to score this as a video or stills camera, or both. And what the award refers to. It wasn't easy, and as always, there were compromises to both approaches.

Sorry you disagree with our final decision, but we were going to make some people unhappy, one way or the other.

9 upvotes
Eleson

I guess it would be strange to judge the 7DII as only a portrait and landscape camera.
Tools should be (re)viewed for their intended purpose.

0 upvotes
brightcolours

If you want to check DXO, do it right. Look at the 18% SNR curve, it is virtually identical to the 6D from Canon. Look at the DR curve, you notice a huge and tell tale bump at ISO 6400. At ISO 3200 the curve would have dived under the 6D curve, but Sony starts to apply noise reduction above ISO 3200.
It is not the low light wonder Sony wants to make us believe or its 12mp low res. would suggest. Rather underwhelmed, to be frank.
http://www.dxomark.com/Cameras/Compare/Side-by-side/Sony-A7S-versus-Nikon-Df-versus-Canon-EOS-6D___949_925_836
Also check the dpreview comparison tool.

2 upvotes
surelythisnameisfree

It does seem inconsistent. Great still cameras are often marked down for poor video, which is fair enough but the reverse should also apply

1 upvote
Jonath

@brightcolours
What has noise reduction got to do with DR? Genuinely interested as I'd not realised there was a link?

0 upvotes
brightcolours

The lower the noise floor, the higher the DR. Sony Exmor sensors have higher DR due to lower read noise (because they have ADC on the sensor itself). Look at ISO 100, the 6D has lower DR caused by more read noise. The DR is "measured" by looking for a certain signal to noise ratio.

1 upvote
Jonath

OK, thanks. Still not quite getting it yet though, I've checked DXO and understand the science now but not sure how noise reduction [as you put it] makes a difference in this case. To have any effect on DR wouldn't it also have an equal effect on the SNR 18% measurement too and hence show up in the SNR graph? The two are intimately linked right and the SNR graphs look linear to me.

0 upvotes
brightcolours

18% SNR is measuring signal to noise ratio on a midtone. Extended DR is in the dark blacks. As you will notice, the 6D/DF/A7s are all almost the same with the 18% SNR graph.

1 upvote
Just Ed

Brightcolors, the 6D is Was reviewed two years ago and can be purchased for about half the price of the Sony. Although it is clearly primarily for still photography.

0 upvotes
Randy Veeman

Very good review. Thank you for pointing out some of the not so true assertions made by the Sony marketing department.
Unfortunately some readers might not take the time to figure out that video from the 1.5 crop of the sensor can't really be 4K like you guys did.
The findings on dynamic range were interesting too.

For MJ FAP, multiple sources show the A7s is a couple EV shy of Sony's DR claim. DxO tested the A7s at every ISO and it never matched the A7R for DR at ISO 100, nor did it come close to the the Sony statement. That being said, overall the A7s DR is excellent at higher ISOs.

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 4 minutes after posting
1 upvote
Thematic

Just remember that the Sony claims for DR, while extreme, are for video under special circumstances and are not that far off what people are able to get.

http://www.cinema5d.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Test-Scores_DR.gif

Take care.

0 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

You're not going to get more DR out of the camera than what the Raw file provides at base ISO, which has been measured to be ~13EV by DXO. Unless the video signal pathway or output has something that bypasses the Raw signal pathway and the Raw signal pathway is somehow throwing away dynamic range.

Which I seriously doubt.

I wonder if Cinema 5D's results are from video that's had some level of noise reduction applied to it? If you apply NR to lower tones, you'd measure a deeper lower tone as having an acceptable SNR cutoff, thereby measuring a higher DR.

If that were the case, you wouldn't actually more DR than the 13 EV the Raw file provides, just more DR after NR - which is a non-standard way of measuring DR.

Either way, it still falls behind the Raw DR of the A7R, D810, D750, etc., b/c of increased downstream read noise compared to those cameras, which I personally think is due to quantization error b/c of the high FWC combined with the limited bit-depth of the ADC.

1 upvote
Thematic

Great point, and again I wasn't challenging the results you achieved - just a different viewpoint.

0 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

No, no, I'm glad you brought it up in fact. I'd seen that some time back & had made a mental note that we should investigate the source of the discrepancy. I'd still like to.

If anyone has any thoughts on this, please share!

2 upvotes
MJ Fine Art Photography

Hmm... You guys seem real proud that you have proven Sony liars about the dynamic range. Just one thing to note though. In your test of the A7R vs the A7s you made one huge mistake that renders your test conclusions mute. You tested one camera at its' base ISO(A7R base ISO100) but not the A7s(base ISO 3200). Not every camera has the same base ISO or the same point at which the highest dynamic range is achieved. For a test whose entire point is determining best dynamic range the obvious first thing to figure out is the actual base ISO of the camera in question and test at that point.

7 upvotes
Thematic

good point. I was wondering that also.

I own the a7s and the Nikon D750 and at base iso of 3200 the results swing in favor of the Sony. (using RAW with lightroom 5.7.1)

1 upvote
Rishi Sanyal

Where did you get that notion? Both cameras were shot at ISO 100.

5 upvotes
Roland Karlsson

Why do you think A7s has a base ISO of 3200?

If it had, the A7s would clip the image seriously at ISO 100.

4 upvotes
wogg

The A7s has a native ISO of 3200, just as he says. It is published information. And that IS where it gets its full dynamic range. Not at ISO 100. Horses for courses. At IS3200, DR of this camera will beat the A7r's, at least in Video, others have tested this.

It turns out to be rather tricky to actually get the full DR this camera has on offer.

2 upvotes
MJ Fine Art Photography

@Rishi. "Both cameras were shot at ISO 100 "

That is exactly my point. They shouldn't have been. Not if the goal was to find the true dynamic range potential. Base ISO is not always 100. It is for most cameras but not all. You seem to be making the wrong assumption that base ISO=100. Base ISO is the point for any given sensor where maximum dynamic range is possible. That is its' "native" ISO or where it is most happy. Anything outside of that up or down and image quality suffers. The A7s at 100ISO is outside of its' happy zone. Your review needs updated in that one section lest the credibility of the whole review be questioned. There is a reason Sony restricts the ISO in the higher dynamic range video settings S-log2 to 3200. That is because outside of this sweet spot the camera will not be able to capture enough dynamic range.

3 upvotes
SnakePlissken

"conclusions moot" surely, or were the conclusions unable to speak?

4 upvotes
Roland Karlsson

The A7s has its maximum DR at ISO 80 according to DXOMark. There is also where it has its maximum TR and its maximum SNR. Where have you read that the native ISO is 3200? Sounds like nonsense to me.

@FineArtPhotographer - sure - let us take images at ISO 100 for A7r and at ISO 3200 for A7s and compare. That sounds more reasonable and fair - or?

1 upvote
Richard Butler

We think we've worked out how you'd conclude that ISO 3200 is the native ISO (though we don't believe this to be the case). Could someone provide a source for this statement, so we can confirm or disprove our suspicions?

3 upvotes
Roland Karlsson

Agree, I also want to have some reference of the claim.

NOTE that exactly what native ISO is can be disputed, as e.g. the ISO definition do not talk of such a thing.

To the best of my knowledge native (or base) ISO of a sensor is the ISO you get when you measure clipping of the sensor.

1 upvote
Rishi Sanyal

No, that's incorrect. The base ISO of the camera is 100, not 3200, as clearly demonstrated by DXO. That's where the camera has maximum dynamic range, as also demonstrated by DXO.

Perhaps you'd like to define the term 'native ISO'... preferably without the word 'happy' in the definition?

2 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

wogg: "At IS3200, DR of this camera will beat the A7r's, at least in Video, others have tested this."

And at ISO 100, DR of this camera will beat DR of itself at ISO 3200... which is why we tested at ISO 100, where the camera DR is maximal.

If you have a high DR scene, you don't shoot at ISO 3200. On either camera. Not if there's anything you can do about it.

4 upvotes
turvyT

Big mistake for dpreview. It seems you guys were a little bit too anxious.

2 upvotes
Lassoni

DP did it correct. A7r has better DR than A7s @ 100-400 ISO . A7s is better than A7r @ 3200 , but it's still nothing compared to what both cameras achieve @ 100.

2 upvotes
Steen Bay

Googled a bit.. seems that ISO 3200 is the native (lowest?) ISO if shooting video in S-log2 mode. Just a video thing. Nothing to do with still images.

1 upvote
Richard Butler

@Steen Bay - absolutely right, ISO 3200 is the lowest available ISO when using the SLog2 mode (which appears to equate to the same sensor amplification as ISO 640 mode does with a standard tone curve, confusingly). But at the sensor level, 'ISO 100' appears to be base in the sense of offering maximum DR.

Comment edited 17 seconds after posting
2 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

Big mistake for people who think it was a big mistake for DPReview.

Max DR is at base ISO, which is 100. SLog2 does raise the minimum ISO to 3200, as we pointed out here. On that same page, we also pointed out that hardware level ISO amplification appear to go up 4x (to be more precise, between ISO 400 & 640 levels), so dynamic range actually drops w/ SLog2 compared to ISO 100. In fact, it was b/c of this that we specifically asked Sony engineers why they raised the minimum hardware-level ISO amp as opposed to simply applying a more aggressive tone curve in SLog2 w/ ISO 100 levels of amp, as the latter would preserve the maximum DR the camera can record. You could use higher ISOs if needed b/c of exposure limitations, but the option for ISO 100 levels of DR would've been nice w/ SLog2.

As it is, though, you're always paying a DR cost by enabling SLog2, which we feel is unfortunate, & goes directly against OP's notion.

8 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

What'd be really nice would be if people actually read our reviews before making comments or making big assumptions that end up being completely wrong. A more appropriate way to address a topic you're clearly confused about is to merely ask us 'hey, as I understand it, it's like so-and-so... thoughts?'

I realize that's it's entirely unreasonable for me to expect civil behavior on the internet, but, still, it'd be nice.

Hope this clears up all the confusion.

7 upvotes
Thematic

So the SLOG base ISO of 3200 was chosen why? I get that its for video but there has to be a reason Sony chose it for this particular sensor.

Not the end of the world however and it doesn't change Dpreviews excellent findings - especially since Sony will have a mega-megapixel FF camera coming soon for landscape photographers.

The a7s isn't for those customers anyway.

Peace.

Comment edited 23 seconds after posting
1 upvote
Rishi Sanyal

"So the SLOG base ISO of 3200 was chosen why? I get that its for video but there has to be a reason Sony chose it for this particular sensor."

Yes exactly, that's what we were wondering. And we never got an answer to it from any Sony rep, unfortunately.

I did make it clear though that in their next implementation, it'd be nice if they offered lower levels of hardware ISO amp.

In fact, we're confused about where the stated 'ISO 3200' even comes from- we measured ISO 640 levels of hardware amplification (by comparing clipping levels in Raw files for ISO 3200 SLog2 shots vs all other ISOs, finding that clipping occurred for the same tones in the scene at ISO 640 vs. a SLog2 ISO 3200 file).

I.e. SLog2 does affect the Raw- at ISO 3200, it's like a ISO 640 Raw in terms of actual Raw signal. But then the ISO 3200 SLog2 JPEG has a drastically non-standard tone curve applied. We figure it's called ISO 3200 b/c midtones are brightened to 3200-ish levels (but even, they're more like 1250).

4 upvotes
Thematic

I appreciate the insight. I know it can be tiresome to see all the critics in these forums but your answering questions is helpful.

Cheers

4 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

Thanks for the positive remarks!

0 upvotes
Eleson

Just a thought around the ISO3200 labeling.
Isn't that, in auto-ISO, something that aims for that 17% grey, and that simply doesn't apply for SLog2?
So what to call it that people can somehow relate to?
- Let's choose 3200...

0 upvotes
james_the_first

Image quality comparable to other still camera at same ISO, worse at lower ISOs, only exceptional by availability of previously unattainable ISOs - still a gold award

I've never been a big worrier about dpr award colours but there is a rather obvious discrepancy here - are we to see other average cameras with niche features also getting golds?

oh - the video - I'm sure it is impressive - but it is video - not stills
j

3 upvotes
Lassoni

It doesn't have the D810 or A7r performance @ 100 ISO

Where it truly shines is at ISO 6400 and 12800 , where it's eating Df for cake http://www.dxomark.com/Cameras/Compare/Side-by-side/Sony-A7S-versus-Nikon-Df-versus-Sony-A7R___949_925_917

3 upvotes
Thematic

Lassoni makes a good point and another positive of the A7s is how much color information is held onto by the camera as the ISOs rise - dynamic range charts are only part of the battle when showcasing what a camera can do. Nikon and Sony are so incredible these days that photographers are truly spoiled.

I never shot film above ASA 800. Yes 800....and now even Micro4/3rds can do that clean without issue.

Wonderful time to take pictures and have fun!

2 upvotes
armandino

stone age 12MP, a sketchy AF, expensive because of a soon to come common offering 4K video yet here it is for you a gold award and 86%
DPReview, time to sort your stuff out

Comment edited 9 seconds after posting
0 upvotes
SRHEdD

Damn near a year in coming, but a POS low-end Canikon gets here in a month. Thanks.

3 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

You're very welcome (for the free service). Btw which POS CaNikon are you referring to?

11 upvotes
photog4u

Adda boy Rishi, way to not take any crap from the mouthy little dreg...

0 upvotes
Leandros S

Rishi, you know as well as the rest of us that it's not "free". If you're not the customer, you're the product - as is the case here:

"With respect to comments or other text-based content you submit or make available for inclusion, you grant us a nonexclusive, royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable and fully sublicensable right to use, distribute, reproduce, modify, adapt, publicly perform, translate, create derivative works from and publicly display such content throughout the world in any medium."

"We reserve the right to make changes to the Web Site, policies, and these Conditions of Use at any time."

There is no opt-out specified, i.e. dpreview owns all content and can do whatever they want with it, including reproducing it in any form.

So I don't think you should be especially exempt from criticism - quite the opposite. You are on a payroll, not working for a charity.

1 upvote
enenzo

@rishi:

In a market that moves very quickly. New products coming out every 9 months. Would you not agree that if a review is to be used as a benchmark for a purchase, then a review needs to surface relatively quickly?

I don’t think many are waiting for 12 months before a purchase... just to see what score DP has given a camera.

And if a review is not to be used as a benchmark for a purchase - what should it then be used for? Cosy Reading?

Today I use other sites then DP. DP is simple just too slow with new reviews. And personally I cannot wait 12 months before I make a purchase… and I’m just a private guy with a love for photography. Think about professionals.

DP you have to stop up – and release your reviews faster than today. I believe that most people would rather have a review come out fast and with fewer details – then wait a year and get a review with a lot of details. As said earlier… it’s a very fast moving marked.

Think about it.

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 54 seconds after posting
1 upvote
Rishi Sanyal

We understand what you're saying, and we agree.

1 upvote
enenzo

@rishi: I hope I did not sounded too harsh. Do not misunderstand me. I love DPReview. Yoy have a GREAT site... and when your reviews come out - they are the best! But the best just not always win in this line of business.

0 upvotes
Jetfly

Would be nice to know that how does ISO-invariance depend on post processing software.

0 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

It won't vary drastically, save for differences due to different levels of default noise reduction in different software packages.

0 upvotes
teddoman

I love the video stills image comparison tool. Very helpful in trying to see the effects of sampling on moire etc. Just wish there were more cameras in that database to compare against, like the A5100 (if it's video is indeed based on full sensor readout as some press releases and reviews say)

3 upvotes
Rishi Sanyal

Thanks for informing us. We'll add the a5100 in.

3 upvotes
Lofote

"Cons: â—¾4K footage from APS-C region of sensor is disappointing"

Seriously? Who wrote that? APS-C in this camera is 12 / 1,5 / 1,5 = 5,3 MP.
4K needs least 8MP.

It should be clear for a child that this CAN'T have the full 4K resolution in APS-C mode!

2 upvotes
Richard Butler

So we shouldn't point out the problem to people who aren't sitting there, working the crop dimensions out in their heads?

While Sony's website shows that the camera can output 4k from the Super35 region of the sensor, we should point out that it's not very good.

Comment edited 55 seconds after posting
3 upvotes
Lofote

I think it should be written "APS-C region of sensor does not provide enough pixel for true 4K" or something like that. :)

3 upvotes
zodiacfml

I think we're on to something here with regards to DR at base ISO.
This thing happened on the Nikon DSLRs such as the D800 against the D600 or D4s.
Amazingly, the DR of the d7000 in DXO is very close to these modern full frames.

0 upvotes
ryansholl

timely Sony a100 review to follow

Comment edited 14 seconds after posting
7 upvotes
brownie314

I am waiting for the A7x. 24MP, 8fps, A6000 AF speed. Nice.

2 upvotes
Lassoni

You forgot the 4k

0 upvotes
brownie314

Nope, didn't forget. I don't care about that. If they include it - fine, but I won't get much use from it.

2 upvotes
FujLiver

The A7S, by a long shot, takes more beautiful photos then any FF canera I have ever used before except the M9 and M240.

The ISO performance effectively makes it ISOless

It's a really special camera

17 upvotes
Lassoni

Have you tried what kind of images 36mp camera can take?

0 upvotes
mpgxsvcd

Here is what I learned from this review.

1. Based on these test results the A7s does not achieve the Maximum Dynamic Range that Sony has claimed at its Base ISO.

2. The A7r achieves a better dynamic range at base ISO than the A7s.

3. The dynamic range and noise response for the A7s exceed that of pretty much all other cameras after about ISO 51,200. However, those results still may not be acceptable at that level.

4. The 1080p @ 60 FPS full sensor readout video in the A7s is the best compressed 1080p @ 60 video you get out of any camera on the market to today.

5. The high ISO video performance is exceptional and unmatched.

6. The cropped A7s 1080p video just isn't worth it.

9 upvotes
Dotes

re 6:
A7s video in crop mode is pretty good and still better than any APS-C photo camera. Also, rolling shutter is acceptable unlike the ridiculous amount in FF mode.

3 upvotes
neil holmes

Seems pretty fair.

I would say that for 3) I would say it is not 51200 but 12800 for all but the 1Dx and D4s and 25600 for those two.

It is actually useable at 25600 and even 51200

As for 6) The APSC video is actually pretty good for 1080p and some say that for 50/60p it is better to use APSC than FF I think.

This is not the camera for everyone or even that many.
For me, it is wonderful......despite what many consider its flaws (things missing that I don't use or need with this camera are not flaws to me).

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 3 minutes after posting
2 upvotes
IsisPix

So how log do we have to wait for the full review of the A7 II? A year? Please. The reality is that you can wrap fish in old news, but it's good for little else. Why would I want to peruse a camera review that's a year old? Doesn't everyone already know this stuff? In the past, a large part of my camera purchasing strategy was based on DP Review's knowledge base . . . I'm getting a little skeptical about that approach now. Also, Looks like Sony is getting the short end of the stick. I'm sure that an uptick in sales, for a nearly obsolete camera, is just what their marketing folks were anticipating. Not.

9 upvotes
TallTommy

Amazing that there are now four A7 cameras and still only one large-aperture prime lens for this system.

1 upvote
Beachrider

There are already reviews in DPReview that call you out on this. Why say it?

1 upvote
Joe Ogiba

Any full frame lens on the planet will work on the A7, it's amazing how DSLR fan boys are such BS artists.

4 upvotes
TallTommy

Call me out on what Beachrider? The fact that the only large aperture AF native lens for this system is the Zeiss 55 f/1.8? That is a fact.
And Joe, I am no fanboy, I love my A7 and 55 lens. And I love AF, MF is tedious, focus-peaking is rubbish and lens adapters work but make AF so slow it is ridiculous.
So what exactly is wrong with what I've said?

0 upvotes
Beachrider

Tall, there is a 35 mm f/2.8 that shows as well.

0 upvotes
Beachrider

The contests on this website call f/2.8 "large aperture". They show substantial info on both.

0 upvotes
TallTommy

Hmm, I would not class 2.8 large for a prime, a zoom yes, absolutely. But you are correct, I had not seen that three new primes had been announced when I posted my comment, (28, 35 and 90). These will be fantastic for the A7 line and also signify more problems for Canon and Nikon..

0 upvotes
brycesteiner

I like the Exposure Attitude test on this. Instead of so many being the same size sensor, I would like to see one different such as replacing the 6D with a E-M1. It might be interesting to see.

I agree with the conclusion that pixel size may not matter as much as the engineering of pixel for that size of sensor.

My guess is that it would be more than a 2 stop difference that shows itself in the normal lab test because of it being engineered for a better light source. My goal is still to engineer the light so I don't have to shoot at 6400 no matter what camera I use.

Here is what I do know: It's better to not underexpose anytime. It's better to raise the ISO at shooting than to try and recover in post.

So what was the final DR? Why was it rated gold if the DR is less than it's still camera siblings?

Comment edited 2 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
Causio

About Exposure latitude comparison with A7R, the A7R wins hands down when iso is low. but for example iso 1600 + 2 stop or iso 3200 + 1 stop (much more common cases) the A7S looks better to me

0 upvotes
Matt1645f4

A7s mkII will be hear before DPR gets there fingers out and review the A7 mkII, why so long to do a review? friend has had his from its launch and the video is mind blowing.

1 upvote
zubs

A year later...maybe there is hope for the Sony A77II SLT review

19 upvotes
nerd2

So a7s was overhyped, high-ISO-video-only camera? That's a bit unexpected.

Personally I prefer 12-16MP and want a nikon (or fuji) FF body with 8fps shooting and fast AF.

2 upvotes
Lassoni

12-16 lacks the extra detail and doesn't give much option for cropping in post. Even the 24mp is much better.

0 upvotes
naththo

Still I am concern about ISO in that A7s that is behind competition of Nikon D750 though. So its a bit of disappointment that they are indeed behind with it. Nikon D750 seems to be better option for still photography while A7s is best for videography but if you want higher resolution probably best bet is Panasonic GH4.

0 upvotes
Lassoni

http://www.dxomark.com/Cameras/Compare/Side-by-side/Nikon-D750-versus-Nikon-D810-versus-Sony-A7S___975_963_949 nikons are better @ 100-400, but after 400 ISO they're all pretty much the same. @ ISO 6400 and 12800 A7s is a clear winner

0 upvotes
Crotach

Wasn't this camera released more than a year ago?

When is the Nokia N95 camera review coming up? :)

4 upvotes
Redlens

Ergonomics means something, for even nothing is something. Its also the reason I grab my a7s over my d800 when I go cruising in my vette.

1 upvote
cbenge

I am a Unit photographer in the film industry and this camera is a game changer for me. It is totally silent, which enables me to discard my blimps. Usually around hour 8-9 I have a burning between my shoulder blades from my 21 pound Nikon in a blimp, and by hour 12 forward it is agonizing. With my 2 Sony7s I can get out of bed the next morning without any pain..

It is also less intimidating to my actors than the huge Nikon DSLR in a blimp.

by using the tip out screen I can get shots without climbing a ladder, I can shoot around a corner if I need to be more discrete.
I find that the low light capabilities are much more than my D4S Nikon offers.
I love this camera and I never shoot video, so I can not comment on that aspect.

I have large hands and found I needed the power grip for balance as well as the extra battery power.

Comment edited 47 seconds after posting
17 upvotes
Viramati

I hear you. I used to be a set photographer in Italy in the 80's and early 90's and used to build my own Blimps. The A7s would have been heaven on earth for this work

0 upvotes
Stu 5

It is not a total game change for film stills photographers. One the camera maybe silent but the lenses are not. That is what the lens tubes are for on the Blimp. Two the silent shutter cannot be used for everything either. It is not good for subjects that are moving because of rolling shutter artefacts. Hence why most film stills photographers will not touch them.

1 upvote
AshMills

My MF lenses are plenty quiet enough.

1 upvote
Heiner3979

My Voigtlaender 35mm f2.5 and 21mm f4 and 50mm f1.5 are also quiet. Put A7s on manual, choose save shutter speed adjust f-stop to required depth of field. Auto Iso adjusts the exposure which you can correct with the knob and if you set it to BW mode you can focus very easy using focus peaking and that works very well when filming !!!! nobody who works as a pro uses AF when filming!! I love this camera

0 upvotes
RichRMA

Ergonomics means nothing, when compared to performance. People will put up with some real horrors. A sharp-edged machined aluminum cube would sell if you could have resolution like a medium format 80mp Phase camera and the noise control of this Sony 12mp.

2 upvotes
vadims

> A sharp-edged machined aluminum cube would sell

Maybe. But why does it have to be a sharp-edged cube?

I for one am really looking forward a7s MkII with a more sane placement of the shutter button...

1 upvote
Rishi Sanyal

As a counterpoint to the popular opinion out there on the a7 II thus far: after shooting with the a7 II this weekend, I really appreciated picking up an a7 at work today. And it was due to ergonomics. We'll tell you why in our full a7 II review. :)

4 upvotes
SnakePlissken

Totally disagree. I think ergonomics are fundamental. Just about any digital camera produces great pictures and has loads of features now. For me, comfort and weight are crucial. I bought a D750 as it was the first Nikon I had ever held that was comfortable and for a DSLR it is relatively small and lightweight yet offers the advantages of lightening quick AF. I took back a Fuji X-T1 as it was not comfortable - the shutter button is too far back on the top of the body, like on the A7...

3 upvotes
quezra

So are you going to upgrade the ergonomics score for the A7 now :D

1 upvote
Joerg V

Give me that cube! Now!

0 upvotes
Xoden

But then you'll see DIY mods to turn it into a half-normal camera.

0 upvotes
AshMills

Hey Rishi, can you let me know when next year to expect the A7II review? ;-)

1 upvote
RichRMA

Side issue; the sanest place for a shutter button is on the front and not the top of a camera, close to the lens. For vibration sake.

0 upvotes
Rooru S

Really enjoy taking pictures with the a7S. It's just like a mini Nikon D4S but with less weight/size, worse AF performance and way less fps in AF-C mode at a cheaper price point to compensate for all of that. I still see the D4S and 1DX as the best photography tools but the a7S is the best daily use camera when best overall performance isn't required.

12 upvotes
RichRMA

Often times, there is a readily-available point of light in a dark scene on which to focus a camera that can't on extended subjects in such a scene (like a face). Obviously, in the studio scene with the face used, that light source was not available. The proverbial "Kubrick" candle-lit dinner scene would be a good example where he had to use a crazy 0.70 focal ratio lens to film with.

http://cdn.studiodaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/1920_barry-lyndon.jpg

0 upvotes
Redlens

Hello all, Sweet camera.
Cheers.

1 upvote
Total comments: 474
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