Derrel
Mr. Rain Cloud
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Nikon's obsessed with catching up to Sony. It's apparent they missed the point of MILCs: size and weight savings. If the new bodies sport the same plus-size as their prosumer and pro DSLRs and lenses weigh-in heavy, they've accomplished very little, hype notwithstanding.
I disagree. MILCs are about MUCH more than weight savings. They perform better in many ways and have features that wouldn’t be possible in a DSLR.
Sony has been massively successful with MILCs that are as big/heavy as a DSLR (and lenses that are bigger than their DSLR equivalents in many cases) because the bodies have so many high tech features.
Personally, I prefer my camera system to have a certain amount of size and weight to it. I find it very easy and natural to shoot with my D810 because it’s increased size and weight actually makes it easier to hold steady and get a secure grip on it when compared to my X-T20, which is pretty much too small (and has poor ergonomics) to comfortably hand hold.
I have to agree with this, the idea that the MILC (Mirrorless Interchangeable Lens Camera) concept is not only about size savings and weight savings compared to the DSLR camera style. Leica's huge and heavy SL mirrorless is a big, weighty camera, with large,heavy lenses, and the Sony A7-series has lenses that are full-sized,heavy,and good. Fuji's X-series has some relatively large,weighty longer zoom lenses. In fact, here is not much,if any, weight savings once one gets into the longer focal length zooms for MILC systems. A lot of the idea that MILC cameras offer smaller,lighter lenses is mostly from early days hyperbole from the micro 4/3 system. On APS-C and FF sized MILC cameras, the lenses are, surprise,surprise, as big and as heavy, or heavier, than the lenses for DSLR systems.
I think cgw was referring to,mostly, the early MILC concept systems, those that used the 2.0x FOV sensor, AKA the m4/3 mirrorless bodies. Sony's A7 series, and Leica's SL, with 24x36mm size sensors, are geared mostly to high-tech features and high performance, and of course, the full-frame 24x36mm sensor size, with LARGE, heavy lenses, with fast, cutting-edge f/stop levels, not slow-aperture lens speeds with variable maximum apertures. There is the small-sensor, m4/3 idea, but there is also a design idea within the MILC segment that saving weight is not the priority, the priority is pro-level optical performance,and high-end body features.
Costly camera bodies and lenses, the types of goods that appeal to people who buy costly camera bodies and lenses, have to deliver high-end performance--and that is the "new mirrorless" idea, not saving size and saving weight, but high-end performance. Nikon's not trying to go after the Panasonic and Olympus, tiny-camera segment, they're aiming bigger, and aiming for higher-priced cameras and lenses,at least with the new Z-mount models they'll introduce within a week.