For you apparently not, but you failed to answer my last question..."Not knocking the G7, but what do you think the response would be if you walked on the set of a major commercial shoot with it?"
Couldn't care less was my answer but otherwise I'm well enough familiar with the value of bluff and perception over substance.
There are cases where even the "pixel peeping" difference is significant. "In photography, the smallest thing can be a great subject. The little, human detail can become a Leitmotiv" - Henri Cartier-Bresson.
Despite the cost, despite its relatively small market share, the brand has continued profitablly since its early beginnings in 1940 as a supplier of cameras for the Swedish air force. Apparently NASA thought there was something special about the brand when they chose it for their space missions. Later it became the one chosen to land on the moon.
I used Hasselbalds for years. Those were mechanical film cameras. These new X cameras are entirely a different critter.
Really Joe, how about a quote from you back in Dec? "It's not a "perceived difference" -- more pixels on the subject is a real difference.....they represent a real quality boost". So which is it....more or less is better? I couldn't find the post but I also remember something about you touting the larger pixel size of a a medium format sensor.
That was in a thread where the question concerned "reach." Would the same lens produce same results on an APS camera and "crop mode" FF. The whole issue in that case for a wildlife photographer was they don't have enough. They're not close enough, the lens isn't long enough, they can't crop enough, etc. Here I'm talking about having more than enough.
Then from earlier in this thread you talk about the quality of the lenses, I don't think there's much doubt that the quality of the glass is superior in the Hassy.
Lots of doubt actually. Back when they were mechanical film cameras Hassy took every opportunity to point out that their lenses were made by Zeiss in Germany. Those were good, I owned some. Now on their website you can't find a single mention of who/where makes their lenses. They don't make them. They're made by Nittoh in China. I use Zeiss, Leitz and Fuji lenses on my Fuji. I'll go with I use better glass.
To be clear I don't own one, don't know if I want one for some of the reasons you've posted, but if I were in a position to need a camera of that caliber, they'd be at the top of my list. I also don't criticize anyone for their choice of gear when that choice is based on matching it to need.
So, I'm not saying there's anything wrong with the Hassy or that it doesn't provide all that resolution, DR, and low-light capacity it's advertised to supply. I'm sure it does. What I'm saying is there's a point of diminishing returns that needs to be considered once you've past the point of having more than enough. The cameras I have now provide me with more than enough resolution, more than enough DR and more than enough noise-free images. I'm way past the point of diminishing returns. If someone gave me that Hassy I probably wouldn't use it since what good is more than more than enough.
Frankly that's the case with my FF Nikon. I didn't buy it. It was given to me brand new four years ago. I barely use it. Just checked and the last photo I took with it is numbered 776. When I received the Z7 I was using my Fuji X-T2 which I still use. My G7 compact goes with me everywhere and get's used more than all my other cameras combined. For most photos it's more than enough. But when I want to use other lenses (macro, superwide, etc.) the fixed lens Canon won't do. Do I get the Z7? No, it's too big and bulky and it's more than more than enough. So I get out my Fuji X-T2 which provides me with all the resolution I need, all the DR I need, noiseless photos, and likely better glass than that Hassy.
If I were put in a position where I was forced to give up some of my existing camera gear, the first thing to go would be the FF Nikon. I don't have a lot of need for overkill. Someone thinks they need a medium format digital camera they're lucky they can get one now with/lens/lenses between 10 and 20 grand. But let's remember how this thread begins. Some guy shot the same photos with a Hassy X2d and a Fuji X-T4 and people couldn't tell them apart. It's hard to see the effects of overkill.