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Learning
Photography Q&A
The perfect wildlife camera?
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<blockquote data-quote="BF Hammer" data-source="post: 745061" data-attributes="member: 48483"><p>Just to muddy the decision a bit, but have you actually tried looking through the viewfinder and tracking a bird with a high-frame-rate shooting burst? I have read complaints from some about there being a substantial lag of the EVF updating to live. Obviously you get blackout with a DSLR mirror motion, but instant optical update when the mirror is down between shots. Maybe the R5 is better than that at Sony. I have not tried either in that respect.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BF Hammer, post: 745061, member: 48483"] Just to muddy the decision a bit, but have you actually tried looking through the viewfinder and tracking a bird with a high-frame-rate shooting burst? I have read complaints from some about there being a substantial lag of the EVF updating to live. Obviously you get blackout with a DSLR mirror motion, but instant optical update when the mirror is down between shots. Maybe the R5 is better than that at Sony. I have not tried either in that respect. [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
The perfect wildlife camera?
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