With the electronic shutter, the A9 II makes viewfinder blackout a thing of the past, meaning the entire time you’re holding down the shutter and taking photos, you’re still seeing a live view of exactly what the sensor is seeing, even at 20 fps. In total, the autofocus points cover more than 93 percent of the frame and focus calculations are made 60 times per second - more than enough for even the most demanding environments and subjects.Ĭomplementing that speed and focus precision is the 3,686k-dot OLED electronic viewfinder that offers a no-blackout display when shooting bursts. The A9 II’s autofocus system consists of 693 phase-detection AF points and 25 contrast-detection points. The sensor also has an extended ISO range of 50 to 204,800 and can fire its electronic shutter as fast as 1/32,000 of a second, a fast enough speed that rolling shutter distortion is much less of a concern than with other electronic shutters. Compared to the 14 fps of Canon’s flagship 1D-X Mark II and 12 FPS of Nikon’s D5, it’s nothing short of mesmerizing. It isn’t just fast, but can hold that 20 fps speed for over 200 exposures in compressed RAW format. Its stacked sensor measures in at “only” 24 megapixels, but what it lacks in resolution, it makes up for in performance. The Xperia 1 II brings Sony’s mirrorless camera tech to a smartphone Sony’s A7S III is the ultimate 4K video camera, five years in the making Smaller and cheaper, the full-frame Lumix S5 is exactly what Panasonic needed
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