like i say, other than not able to change lens and also evf, the rest are just the same... which also mean the price will not be anywhere close to current fz...
for the price, i guess most would rather get a olympus dSLR or the L10/L1
the size would also be quite alot bigger, just take a look at most of the 18-200, they alone are heavier than even the fz50 iirc, even with a smaller sensor like 4/3 they will weight almost the same as the fz50, and those weight are excluding the body/batt... etc
having said that, you probably get f2.8-4.5 thats the best i can estimate.
Just a simple comparison, the leica 14-150 for 4-third is weighting at 520g with a aperture of a normal F3.5-5.6 and a 72mm filter thread
personally, i would spend the $ for even the R1, at 1.5k+ (iirc) i rather get the e410 or e510. Im not saying that it will not be selling, but will the demand/profit be higher than the R&D spent?
haha, thats why i'm a olympus dslr user after my FZ30.
anyways, i agree with your points above. just to share some points since this is purely just a speculation thread:
- Panny manufactures the lastest batch of 4/3 sensors, that inclues the E3 sensor
- Contrast based AF is available with a 4/3 sized sensor (Lumix L10)
- if its a FZ series, it doesn't have to comply with the 4/3 standards even if it is using a 4/3 sensor. lens formula can be different or even use a sensor crop to achieve equivelent focal length without designing a big lens (1.33x of a 4/3 sensor anyone :bsmilie
so basically, think of the possibility of a FZ camera with the the following:
- 4/3 sized sensor
- L10 contrast based AF
- meatier FZ50 body and controls
- E3 / L10 flip out screen
- no mirror box
- no lens mount
- no shutter assembly (electronic shutter as with compacts)
- similar Leica branded 12x zoom lens
currently, the L1 and L10 is way overpriced (L10 $1600 - $1800). the FZ50 retails for $899 (RSP), so if the frankenlumix does exist, it can be priced as a premium product in the range of $1199 and compete with budget dslrs. it may not appeal to everyone, but it is a ONE camera / lens solution that can break the compact camera mould.
the current flip out is gd, somemore price is ard 800-850haha, thats why i'm a olympus dslr user after my FZ30.
anyways, i agree with your points above. just to share some points since this is purely just a speculation thread:
- Panny manufactures the lastest batch of 4/3 sensors, that inclues the E3 sensor
- Contrast based AF is available with a 4/3 sized sensor (Lumix L10)
- if its a FZ series, it doesn't have to comply with the 4/3 standards even if it is using a 4/3 sensor. lens formula can be different or even use a sensor crop to achieve equivelent focal length without designing a big lens (1.33x of a 4/3 sensor anyone :bsmilie
so basically, think of the possibility of a FZ camera with the the following:
- 4/3 sized sensor
- L10 contrast based AF
- meatier FZ50 body and controls
- E3 / L10 flip out screen
- no mirror box
- no lens mount
- no shutter assembly (electronic shutter as with compacts)
- similar Leica branded 12x zoom lens
currently, the L1 and L10 is way overpriced (L10 $1600 - $1800). the FZ50 retails for $899 (RSP), so if the frankenlumix does exist, it can be priced as a premium product in the range of $1199 and compete with budget dslrs. it may not appeal to everyone, but it is a ONE camera / lens solution that can break the compact camera mould.
just slap on a nice fuji 1/1.7" superCCD and i be happy with everything intact as per fz18 or fz50 (of cos hopefully with a 28mm lens, don mind if it is only until 300mm) :bsmilie:
megapixel? 6 is all i care on a PnS
well, doesn't have to be pana, i don mind a Fuji s6500 if it comes with megaOIS or something equiv.that would be the almost perfect compact...too bad panny will never be caught dead using some other manufacturer's sensor :cry:
as most wof them who have already know, those "number" are marketing for the mass market... probably more than 50% of the consumer don't know about noise at all until they read and understand...The main problem lies with the sensor... if panasonic can reduce the amount of pixels they squeeze into such a small sensor and improve its quality, it will sure be a very very good buy (since it's already a good buy now)