@@jakebaine Ok.. So if you buy a camera that has absolutely no demand in your area, meaning one wants to rent it, or pay you a premium for bringing it on set for professional work, why would you say this is a bad take? Unless you're a wealthy hobbyist, there's no reason from a reasonable business standpoint to make the purchase. Please explain and justify your Bad take...
The Sony specs sheet shows 4K 17:9 as Super 35 cropped - 4096x2160 on a 8632x4856 sensor - so it's a massive crop not 1.07 crop - regardless of if you are at 25 or 50p. It would be fantastic if they could use the full sensor for 4k (through line skipping) but this is not the case) - the crop will be 2x plus.
@@YourStoryStudios I thought it was independent of codec - but I might be wrong - the massive crop to 4k and therefore 100fps is one of the main things putting me off the Burano. It would be great if it could shoot utilising the full 8k sensor (and therefore the full width of our full frame lenses) and oversample this into a 4k file ;)
@YourStoryStudios@@wesgreene9908In FF Crop 6K (1.07x) scan mode, you can shoot oversampled UHD, DCI 4k or HD when using XAVC-I with 60fps max. If you want HFR, 60+ fps, you have to use cropped S35 (2.25x from FF) and can use X-OCN LT or XAVC-I at 4K DCI. It less confusing once you understand how the different scan modes affect the recording formats.
It is interesting to note that X-OCN has a similar spread of data rates as ProRes on the Fuji X-H2, and unlike the VENICE, you don’t need to spend 4 grand each on the recording media (AXS). The BURRITO uses CFexpress B. I do expect to see X-OCN ‘raw’ on Sony’s mirrorless cameras eventually, like a future a7s IV, but they need to fucking get on with it as it has been around since 2016. Something mirrorless cameras have generously given the BURRITO in return for nothing back is IBIS, by the way. Yes, the BURRITO features IBIS, which Sony said was not possible to do with an internal ND filter. This gives me hope that we will be finally getting internal ND filters on our IBIS lumbered mirrorless cameras, and that Sony were simply lying.