My in-depth review of the Sony A7 IV for stills photography! Sony A7 IV at B&H: bhpho.to/3G4L4dc // WEX UK: tidd.ly/3vzrq4n Buy Gordon a coffee: www.paypal.me/cameralabs Gordon's In Camera book: amzn.to/2n61PfI / Amazon uk: amzn.to/2mBqRVZ Cameralabs merchandise: redbubble.com/people/cameralabs/shop Gordon’s retro gear channel: ru-vid.com Equipment used for producing my videos Sony A6400: amzn.to/3hul53c Sony e 24mm f1.8: amzn.to/2TqWNzk Rode NT USB mic: amzn.to/3AdHcUp Rode Wireless Go II mic: amzn.to/3xkCvGo Rode Lavalier Go mic: amzn.to/3ygzzKY Godox UL150 light: amzn.to/2VpVbXE Godox QR-P70 softbox: amzn.to/3yQfGdF MacBook Pro 13in (16GB / 512GB): amzn.to/3hrwMYD 00:00 - intro 01:27 - A7 IV vs A7 III design and controls 03:19 - A7 IV vs EOS R6 design and controls 04:23 - A7 IV controls and exposures 05:50 - A7 IV screen and menus 06:58 - A7 IV viewfinder EVF 07:33 - A7 IV card slots 08:26 - A7 IV battery 08:47 - A7 IV ports 10:09 - A7 IV sensor 11:09 - A7 IV vs A7 III vs EOS R6 resolution 12:06 - A7 IV vs A7 III vs EOS R6 high ISO noise 14:00 - A7 IV stabilization IBIS 14:49 - A7 IV focus and burst speeds 18:02 - A7 IV rolling electronic shutter 18:47 - A7 IV samples and verdict Music: www.davidcuttermusic.com / @dcuttermusic As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases
did you shoot this on 6400? I noticed in the section showing the doors opened to show the ports like headphone jack, the AF wasn't uniform. one time it showed the port, but the other times the doors edge. surprised you use AF while locked off on static shots
@@yourmommashouse yes I shot on the A6400. i often use a mix of MF and AF on the details, as I sometimes need to change the exact focusing point mid-shot. I had to change it for each of the ports as they were at slightly different distances.
Hey @GordonLaing - Thorough and insightful review as ever. ** Two issues I am curious about. Can you please ask Sony if it's the same problem--prone shutter as the A7III. Also, do you know if it has the same striping issues with heavily backlit subjects. Thanks so much! -C.M.
@@foxtowercommunications what was the problem with the older shutter? And no I didn't see any striping issues, but then I also didn't try it with heavily backlit subjects.
One notable thing about the electronic shutter is that you can fine tune the shutter speed to fight against banding. I can see that being very useful for e.g., wedding photographers who want to be discreet.
only stacked sensors are fast enough to shoot in that scenarios. I personally would never use the electronic shutter in the a7iii or iv. Also the mechanical shutter in the a7iv is very quiet anyway
@@hardywoodaway9912 Only stacked sensors are fast enough to shoot in most situations _without_ requiring fine-tuning the shutter speed. (Even in that case though, there are exceptions.) Best I can tell a relatively slow sensor can fight banding with the right shutter speed (you can do that with the Sony a7iii, for example, but its flexibility is very limited so that you can't do it in all banding situations).
I honestly find it insulting Sony is still using those shite screens at 1 million dots on anything costing more than 2 grand. I thought they finally learned their lesson when they upgraded the screens on the a7rIIIa and the a7rIVa but no they did not.
@@eos1d3 you won't be disappointed... but don't expect Adobe to support your files lol ... 3 year old camera the EOS R / RP and they still don't support it lol
@@SwapnilBhartiya They are both great systems with great glasses. Just personal taste. Here in Australia, Canon lens are way more expensive than Sony lenses.
The one key advantage of the Canon R6 over the a74 is the burst speed: 20fps versus 10fps, that is SIGNIFICANT. Like, night and day significant. This huge R6 advantage is not even mentioned in Gordon's review, why? How can the a74 "take the lead" while falling so short in this key area?
Don’t forget the Sony drops to 6 FPS if you enable any kind of compression for the RAW files (either lossless or lossy compression) - according to Jared.
Well it depends which features are most important o each person AND also how practically they can be achieved. As you know, the 20fps on the Canon is with the electronic shutter, so prone to skewing AND it only works with a full battery and specific lenses. Once you take everything into consideration, the R6 becomes most commonly closer to 12fps, which is its top mech speed.
Great review Gordon. Very informative as usual. But topping out at 10fps and cropped 4/60 means it’s hardly a worthy successor to the camera that ate Canon and Nikons lunch three years ago
Thanks! Depends, really, how much you value all the small video enhancements. For me they did everything they feasibly could for the money, as stacked CMOS or 4k 120 remains higher-end.
Still seems like the Canon R6 is a better “box” than the a7 iv for the same price. But when you factor the lenses and ecosystem as a whole the Sony a7iv is probably a better choice …
This was the most informative review of the camera of all I've watched so far, which are quite a few. Especially with the comparisons against its biggest rival, the R6. Great work!
@@cameralabs That is disappointing. I suspect some amounts going into boosting their reach but I guess everyone does these days. I can't change the numbers but what I can do is buy you a cup of coffee. Cheers from Sweden!
@@cameralabs I would run an IT Load Test to give you 15X more hits (or even enough to crash the RU-vid servers) but don't want to go to jail ;) Your videos ROCK! Especially since you do Astro stuff too. I wonder if the mark IV is still a Sony Star Eater camera :( Hope not. I was planning to get the R6 as my 1st FF but this one looks like a better fit, for me. Thanks, Gordon.
I bought my canon eos 500D in 2009, I used to watch your reviews on your website. Fast forward many years, I’m watching your reviews for my next camera. Thank you Gordon 👍🏻
Thanks, but I did have it for over a week before the launch, as did the other reviewers, so we all had the same time. I worked 12 hour days while I had it.
Great review once again Gordon. I appreciate the straight forward approach, and that you remain honest with what you like / dislike. Great that you compare it to Canon as well. I'm an 'enthusiast' with an a7iii, and while I appreciate all the significant upgrades, my budget doesn't allow me to upgrade to the a7iv at this time. It will be interesting to see how much of a price-drop we will see on 'used' a7iii bodies with the release of the a7iv . . . . .thank you for putting out a great review!
Gordon as always great work, I use Sony but I am passing on this model. I was hoping for a more usable electronic shutter for wildlife. I wish they would make an "A9 crop camera". This is a great camera for video folks with a nice bump in resolution, good to see all these companies pushing the envelope and competing for our hard earned money.
I double that! The alpha apsc line is too crippled rn. Even the dials and body shape is far from a convenient shape sony already had in their slt models like a77... It's funny how A77 had 12fps back in 2011! Shake a leg Sony!
As a pure hobbyist in Australia taking photos during vacations and family events, I'll stay with the a7iii, because the cost of upgrading to an a7iv will mean at least one additional GM lens purchase for me.
@@YanFries I have both the R6 and the A7IV and going to give it a test for about a month. R6 with RF 100-500 vs A7IV with the 200-600G. So far I noticed a big EVF lag on the Sony when panning for birds in flight compared to the R6. This may be enough to keep the R6 or sell the Sony and go R5. Still need to test compressed raw vs uncompressed and the FPS limits in read life. Been shooting Canon for 20 years so I'm biased.
Really great review Gordon, I really appreciate these photography only reviews! I had the A7III but decided to swap over to the Canon R6 and I'm glad I did as I don't feel I'm missing out on anything with the A7IV, especially at $4000 AUD.
@@dandelionestudios At the time, The R6 had a few features the A7III didn’t have like the fully articulating screen and much better AF (Since the A7III never got the real time tracking update). Also because I had too many lenses on Sony, I could make the swap without any loss so that made it easier. Now the A7IV is out I wouldn’t mind the 33mp but it isn’t something I really care about but there’s small features on the Canon like the Bulb Timer that I find really useful. Lens wise Sony has some really great options and if I had the money I’d honestly own both systems but here in Australia the A7IV is a few hundred cheaper than the A7RIV so I don’t feel it’s as good value.
Honestly, for such a highly anticipated camera, I cannot go over two things - Severely limited silent shutter (remember that is supposed to be a major advantage of mirrorless, right?) And measly 5 (yes, five!) fps for uncompressed RAW shooting. Why? It's 2021 ffs!
@@cameralabs I'm reading spec on DPreview. They say the sensor in 7IV is scanned for 1/15 second and the one in R6, for example, for 1/50. A big difference and that's supposed to be the direct competitor, right? If these numbers are true, the silent shutter of 7IV is only good for buildings or rock formations. And the one in R6 is actually usable for many things. I mean, my E-M1 II had a sensor that was scanned in roughly 1/50 and was perfectly usable for people having conversation or a slow going ceremony. And the Canon RP had one, that was like 1/10 and was unusable for anything, that moves even a little bit. For me, that's a huge deal in a mirrorless camera. "The benefit of shooting in complete silence". Or not.
@@momchilyordanov8190 I prefer to test things in real life rather than relying on written specs. In my tests both the A7 IV and R6 suffered from quite visible rolling shutter that made shooting anything moving with their electronic shutters skew. I show it in my R6 review.
Another stellar effort, Gordon. Thank you. Sony seems as reluctant to give us focus bracketing as they have been with the rear touch screen. The in-built focus bracketing on my Fuji camera is outstanding. One other observation: While the fully articulating screen is very appealing for video makers, that feature totally kills the possibility of using "L" brackets on the camera. For some of us firmly rooted in the stills world, that is a not insignificant issue. Looking forward to part 2.
@@brianlaunchbury4491 Waist level landscape orientation with the screen angled is most definitely not possible with an "L" bracket + fully articulating panel.
We are looking forward to seeing the comparison between a7RIII and a7IV in term of Dynamic Range. I think this will answer if A7RIII owner should swap to A7IV. So far, the only thing we can see is just the megapixels, the thing that we gonna lose if swap to a7IV.
FANTASTIC. The BESTdetailed IN DEPTH review over all the upgrades and features of the new A7iv Ive seen to date. Greta job Gordon!!! you rock. This camera ticks all my boxes that I wanted and gave some extra surprises I didnt expect (dust prevention over shutter when off!!!) . I cant wait to have enough $$ to be able to get my own a7iv down the road.... looijung forward to part 2 (even though I dont care about the video side of things as im a photo centric shooter, and your more detailed review once hyou get a real production model in house for real world testing and can get Adobe to edit the RAW files.
As always, great job Gordon! Ticked off every box for me aside from a higher rez rear LCD and Stacked sensor (one can hope :D). Still loving my stop-gap Z6ii and waiting to see if the Z9 brings the lower models some firmware af improvement, otherwise I'll be on a Sony & Tammy bandwagon soon. The colors also seem improved to my eyes... I was surprised I liked the Sony better than the R6.
I definitely think you should rent both the R6 and the A73 (A74 likely won't be available for some time). I had (have the R6) both and the color science on the Canon is just no comparison. Sony takes good looking photos, but if you're going to be shooting people or animals or anything... color just isn't there.
Was surprised to see a7iv image quality difference was very noticeable over the A7iii, and miles better than the r6, surprised the r6 was not better at high ISO, it was far worse. Not enough improvements over the a7iii for my needs, so I'll not be upgrading any time soon.
A big letdown, for me, is the raw stills maximal frame rate being no better than the model III's-in effect, 8 fps for critical action-and now 10 fps raw needs a CFexpress A card [15:57]?!
Please, excuse me for technically misrepresenting your video. (Now editing my original post, I've added the word _raw_ to prevent potential confusion by other readers.)
Thanks Gordon. Another great, informative review. Just sold my a7r4 body as no option to save Raw at less than full 61Mp, which for many use cases was complete overkill. Now pre-ordered an a7iv - as you say it's the one to beat. Canon R6, although good, is academic now as I'm circa 10 lenses into the Sony ecosystem. 3 years back I switched from Nikon after 28 years and couldn't contemplate doing anything like that again wirot the being a substantial advantage Vs Sony. So most unlikely now I will ever switch again as Sony appear to want to remain a serious camera player.
A 2,700 EUR camera that can't shoot 10 FPS uncompressed, has no focus stacking, no focus bracketing, no top LCD, no vehicle tracking and so on and so forth... I am not sold on this camera. In fact... I am disappointed. Looks like I will be waiting 2-3 more years to upgrade or will just switch to Canon.
Honestly, Your review is the best among other youtubers. Clear in detail in each section. I am looking forward to seeing DR test and Noise handling when you have RAW available. Cheers
I think we are coming to the point where all mirrorless cameras are doing a great job. They are finally catching up with Sony. The big advantage for Canon is their lens quality. I still think it is the best in the full frame cameras. If you can afford those pricey L lenses. I am waiting to see what, if any, big differences will come with Micro 4/3 cameras before ditching it and changing to something else. I just hope they can improve low light performance, but we'll see. As always, great video Gordon. Very detailed and nothing left out. Always appreciate your channel.
But there are no third part lenses for Canon which is a big draw back for many, although I think I’ve dozed off during reviews of about 5 or 6 reviews of 50mm e mount lenses! Lol
The Sony 24, 35, 50 1.2 and new 70-200 are without question best in class. They don't have an 85 1.2 or 28-70 2 yet so it depends on what your needs are but I wouldn't say their quality is worse at all.
I loathe the lockable mode dial of the A1. Why does this need to be lockable? It is far from any accidental finger knocking. This A7IV version seems a sensible compromise, with only the (now programmable) Exposure Compensation Dial with a lock. Am I alone in my dislike of the lock on the A1?
Really appreciate the review being in two parts. I don't do video at all, have no interest in it now or in the future so I am glad just to focus on reviews on the photography aspect of the camera rather than sit through the portions that focus on the video capabilities.
Damn Gordon you work fast. Such an long extensive test ready right on the review embargo. Enough information available for informed buying decissions before they can be found on the shelves. Good good job.
Great review and camera. The A7IV is definitely one to consider for a shooter like me who wants bang for the buck and is not a pro but enjoys the hobby. Gonna check out part 2 now and see how the video features are.
I am not sure I followed this correctly: is the exposure bracketing available with the interval like with Nikon z7II and Z6II? I agree that it is a huge disappointment that they didn’t include any extended times beyond 30 sec like the new Nikons nor programmable bulb mode like Canons.
I've never own any Sony camera before. Before this I'm mainly use my camera for photography only and your review makes me one to have one. Looking forward to test this camera when its available in my country. Thanks Gordon!
I intend to buy a new camera and I find your reports very useful. So far the Sony a7 iii surpasses all my expectations. I watched your report on the Olympus OM-1 iii and two features that I liked on that camera are the best In Body stabilization and the Live ND (Neutral Density Filter) in camera setting. I wished that the Sony had both handy and better features. Your reports are very clear and helpful. I have also been impressed by the Fujifilm XT-4. You see I have been a Sony digital and DSLR camera person and Minolta film camera person.I dropped my 15 year old Sony a350 at the beginning of 2022 and broke it and now I am on the prowl for a new and updated camera. Photography has been a passionate hobby of mine since the B&W film days together with developing and printing my own. Thank you for all your reports.
The A7-IV is the best. Just the 33-MP sensor is superior to the relative competition, not to mention the AF system. Body, menus, IQ.. everything is great, especially when used with GM lenses, of which I have 5 of them. For street photography It has everything I would want.
Good honest review, looks to be my perfect camera except I don't have £2600 spare. I need a new car for the dreaded ULEZ starting on Monday, as a lowly paid creative that needs to move equipment regularly its a killer especially combined with the CG, £27.5 a day aghh.
Successor is ok, but certainly not a worthy successor. The price of € 2800.- is a joke. The display on the monitor has only 1 million pixels ????? Every second person wears glasses and therefore does not stick to the viewfinder. Every cell phone from € 100.00 has a better display. The Sony Alpha 7R IIIA and Sony Alpha 7R IV A have a monitor of 2.4 million pixels and cost € 1890, - and € 2480, - with the English menu navigation. The 3-year-old Sony Alpha 7 III is available for as little as € 1500 and is still used by professional photographers today. So, don't let yourself be gossiped.
I wear glasses and don't use the monitor during shooting because I can't see it without close up glasses. With the viewfinder I can keep my normal glasses on with the dioptre correction and work uninterrupted. Clearly you don't have an age related issue and have to wear glasses for looking at the monitor, one day you will and realise the error of your comment.
@@speculumc You tried to make out that glasses wearers would only look at the rear screen but the opposite is the case. As a glasses wearer I rely entirely on the viewfinder, it's my only practical option. Understand now?
Unless you consume images one pixel-at-a-time, pixel size has no bearing on the cleanliness of high-ISO images for sensors based on the same technology/architecture. Assuming that, sensor surface area is the relevant specification affecting image noise.
Good video mate as always , as purely a hobby shooter with an A73( i still love my old A73) , it does seem sony did a decent job of fixing a lot of the A73 little niggles , the port doors , the menu , the touch screen ( or lack of touch on the oldie :) ) , more hand grip area for those of us with big mitts , and improved layout of the controls , and some more MP is nice. Cheers.
Its interesting how its now Sony playing catch up to Canon and the R6. I would still take an R6 over this. Better video, much better stabilization, better EVF and rear display and the biggest one 20fps mechanical, the a7IV can only do 10 and only in JPEG or C-RAW. Drops to 5 in any other mode which is sad. Its overpriced at $2500, should have been around $2k.
Agreed on the better IBIS and other comments but the R6 has worse rolling shutter and 10.5 stops of usable DR (the worst on any modern FF camera) compared to 12.8 on the 7IV. Ask most cinematographers what they'd choose and I doubt it would be the R6.
Glad to see 33mp for the mainstream. I hope canon and nikon quickly follow in bumping up the resolution. I went from a d810 to a z6 and I miss the extra resolution. I'm very interested in seeing the raws, always disappointing it takes a couple of weeks before that is available
The 33% rise in resolution helps, in itself, but when it basically downgrades frame rate, increases rolling shutter, crops 4K 60p to Super35mm format, and omits any 4K 120p at all, this no longer feels like the Sony redefinition of "basic" model-much less, now, "beyond basic"-and makes me wonder if they could, instead, have reused the α9's sensor, 24 MP yet _stacked_ and thus very fast, while lowering the frame rate to make the camera ISO invariant.
My Canon Eos 90D has 32.5 mp. And yes, M Tech, it is a pretty big deal. Big enough to make a lot of people suddenly very unhappy with their Canon EF 100-400 version 1.
If a7 iv have no crop 4 k 60 then similar to r6 , r6 drawbacak only overheating ; 4k60 - 38 minute , 4k30- 40 minute , 4k 24 - 55 minute and 1080 -60p can record in overheating signal too , in my experiment. Im not professional but hobby its enough to me . if need to buy i will get r6 .
I wish someone would test the e-shutter under various artificial light sources. I suspect quiet indoor situations are a bigger deal to most people than fast action.
@@TrivisualsCreativeAgency I think it's a great camera overall, maybe we all expected it to be another revolutionary camera like the a7iii. It's got alot of improvements over the predecessor, but definitely not a game changer this time. Still a good camera, but not very impressed.
That bizarre five second delay for the shutter to close on power off makes it nearly useless for someone working at a shoot. Who wants to wait five seconds to do a lens change? 🤦🏻♂️
Thanks for the detailed review. You are the only review to address the evf lag in wildlife/sport! Thanks for that. Would you say the lag is better or worse compared to a7iii?
it seems to me that, like Canon, Sony is pushing for a lens upgrade, since the original 28-70mm kit lens only serves about 27 to 30MP. for the Mark IV, the bottom line moves to 24-105mm f4 G, like the Canon EF L II or RF lenses, a premium compared to older versions.
I am a Canon shooter. I am highly invested in their eco system. That’s like being married. At the same time I can’t help but admiring my neighbors gorgeous wife. Sony really is hitting it out of the park. Their product line offers more value than Canon. Objectively Sony leading in hybrid functionality. I get good results with my Canons However there are some real compromises sort of like a marriage 😉
It seems like Sony is using less DRAM cache compared to other models in their lineup and the competition. Those raw burst speeds are a bit concerning. Did the R6 also suffer from buffering issues and FPS drop with raw? Aside from the drop in FPS when the battery is below a certain level.
Fab video, this camera is a very compelling release by sony! Plus, your videos help me relax as I get better from covid, had a lot of anxiety lately, so need as much help as I can get!
@@cameralabs Going to be a tough ride this, but I think i'm doing it slowly. Tough day yesterday, but today is day 3 out of hospital and the longest i've been out, so a milestone! Your content really helps keep me going.
Great review,thanks. I have an EOS RP as my intro to FF mirrorless. It’s focus tracking and frame rate are now hindering me in my wildlife photography. Mainly use EF/Sigma lenses with adapter. Familiar with Canon from use with old Elan 2E film, how I got into Canon digital. My main concern going to the R6 is cropping for wildlife pictures. Main concern going to Sony is changing everything. Quite the quandary you present here!
I know a few people in your position. The R6 is a great camera, but many people are inevitably put off by the res and if you're cropping a lot, it can be a concern. You could of course adapt your EF lenses to the Sony, but the AF won't be very fast..
I transferred from the rp to a Sony a7iii. Absolutely superb camera and definitely recommend the upgrade! I'm currently thinking of upgrading my a7iii to this a7iv
I hay very bad colour banding in long exposure .My settings is: iso 100 , aperture between f8 and f16 and shutter speed between 10 and 30 sec or Bulb .
Best review I've seen, and I've watched A LOT!! I was really disappointed to see Sony not use a stacked sensor though, this is a massive letdown imo. Was banding still really bad on this brand new camera when using SS? I would really love to see an A7iv Vs A9 (first one) as they are both the same price right now.
@@cameralabs I know Sony needs to keep separation between the A9 and the A7 series but give the hefty price increase we have seen with this new model I think Sony could/should have incorporated a stacked sensor, even if they still limited it to 10fps. You would expect this model to see Sony through to well into 2024 but with an often unusable Silent Shooting mode it's just not going to cut it.
From what I've seen here, the Sony camera has nicer files than the Canon. I expected a more or less even result at this point. But Sony has always made better sensors, so I'm not surprised. I'm very happy with Micro 4/3 for almost everything, and if I want a system with really high image quality, I would go straight to medium format. Why waste time with 36mm sensors if image quality is your priority?
Great video as always Yes canon r6 might be also very good - the canon killer is lens prices Yes great lenses but very few mid range at affordable prices Seems prices range from $2299-$3000 Sony can use Viltrox Samyang Tamron Sigma And many Sony mid range also Sony better looking
Thanks for your great reviews, Gordon. I could never use a camera which overheats on stand by. That is unacceptable and no one is talking about it. Mine turned off while setting the video menus. Sony needs to address this. Never happened with my A7III and A7Riii. Take care
I didn't personally experience this, but in general use, I automatically switch a camera off between shots - a habit I've done for so long, my fingers can't help it! So I didn't see what it would do if left in standby, or indeed how this compared to older models as I didn't use them like that either. Next time I have an A7 IV, I'll try that out. What are your conditions where it overheats? How long has it been in standby since a full power down?
@@cameralabs thanks for your reply, Gordon. I was at home at around 20-25 Celsius. The Camera was on for the time it took me to start setting up my video Menu preferences (not more than 10 mins) when it turned itself off. Take care
@@benitezvisuals that doesn't sound good. I'm sure I've had the camera on for this long when setting it up or reviewing material. Does opening the screen out help? You might also want set the Auto temp setting to high.
Definitely a nice upgrade but I dont think its worth selling an a7iii and purchasing the a7iv. Will end up paying $1000+ more and the upgrades don't really change image quality enough to justify that. Atleast for me personally!
Hi Gordon, It is a great video. Thanks. In my area the A7 IV and A7R IVA are same price. I am 30% video and 70% photography. In your opinion how is the autofocus performance between the A7 IV and A7R IVA in both video and photography?
The newer model is definitely snappier at AF and better at recognition. If you're shooting lots of fast moving subjects then the A7 IV will be better. But the A7r IV still isn't bad and it does have that monstrous resolution.
@@marcuschay8962 it'll be on a presentation somewhere but I tend to gloss over those specs and actually try to see how it performs in practice. In which case it's below the A1 and A9 in my tests, but still good enough for casual sports and wildllife. It kept up with our school teams and the local seagulls, but I wouldn't use it for pro sports.
@@cameralabs Thanks. Just bought an A7R IVA for landscape and portraiture. I did watched your A7R IV review. Now considering to change my A7 III to A7 IV for video.
Great review as always Gordon but frustrated with RU-vid who presented me with a Jared Polin review and hence I knew the embargo had been lifted but that I had to go to the subs menu to find your review! A74 has never been on my list but is interesting as I’m hoping there I’ll be an A9III in the pipeline with enhanced features and not the A1 price tag. Would also like the focus bracketing, only reason to keep my Nikon d850, also has Sony now included a choice of raw file sizes as well as jpg? Frustrating on the R4 that you can only get a smaller raw size by cropping. If you could drop the file size they might have been able to offer a faster frame rate 10 frames per second at 33, and say 20 at 20?
As always, great content Gordon. I have pre-ordered this body to add to my stable. I do have a question though - you mention in your conclusion that the A7iv will be the "entry level full frame" camera in Sony's line up - I would have thought the A7c would be the entry level model, since it's still a current model. Perhaps you're aware of a replacement for that camera that you can't tell us about?
Good review. I'm still confused sometimes when you mention competitors while only referring to Canon, but that's life. I'm surprised at how the various brands are leapfrogging each other in some regards, but not all. For example, Sony having much much better AF than Nikon, while at the same time missing "simple" features that the Z6 has. Guess you can't have it all? One question: you mention EVF lag, and that it can be reduced by switching from H+ to H. What's the FPS in H mode? For comparison, the Z6 II has H+ maxing out at 14 FPS (with caveats) but terrible lag, while H is 5.5 FPS with no lag.
In H mode the top speed is 8fps, which is what H+ falls to under some conditions anyway. As for Nikon, I can't review them if they don't send them in to test, and I did talk about Panasonic in part 2.
Great review Gordon! Is it just me, or is the canon's r6 menu far more intuitive? Sony's a7 iv seems much better than its predecessor but the menu still seems clunky