Nikon Z7 – I am a Bad Idea

Nikon Z7 – I am a Bad Idea and a waste of YOUR money!

Nikon Z7

And NO – this title isn’t meant as clickbait!

I love Nikon cameras for many reasons.

I HATE Nikon as a company.

I dislike Canon cameras for numerous technical and ergonomic reasons.

I LIKE Canon as a company.

The Nikon D5 was THE FIRST Nikon camera I’ve used that I dislike and thought was like the proverbial bag of spanners.

But now there’s a new Nikon that takes over the mantle of Nikon at its very worst – and I’ve not even clapped eyes on one yet let alone handled one.  I don’t need to play with one to know just how much of a rip-off this pile of rubbish really is.

This camera is £4000 at Wex here in the UK – yes, that FOUR THOUSAND of your hard-earned spondoolicks (for our overseas friends that’s ‘slang’ for pounds sterling).

We’ve already harangued the Z7 for its single media slot – and Canon followed suit with the EOS R, is that a coincidence?

But here’s the kicker, and the MAIN reason why the Nikon Z7 is a crock, and the indicator lies at the foot of page 57 in the Nikon Z7 user manual:

Nikon Z7

And for those with bad eyesight:

Nikon Z7

You can see/download the manual here: NIKON Z7 USER MANUAL

I think the first to show the AF problems with the Nikon Z7 was the ‘afro haircut idiot know-nothing from Philedelphia’ – you know, the guy who never knew how to use Photoshop until the other month when Matt Kloskowski showed him how – live on YouTube.

Lot’s of people are jumping on the DISS THE NIKON Z7 AF bandwagon as I’m typing this, but none of the morons are pointing out WHY the NIKON Z7 auto focus is so crappy.

So I will tell you why!!!!

There is no way to have any control finesse over the AF functionality.

Nikon Z7

Above is the main control functionality for the D5/500/850 MultiCAM 20K AF system.

You will see controls for Blocked Shot Response and Subject Motion.  These roughly equate to Tracking Sensitivity and Acceleration/Deceleration Tracking on the controls for the Canon 61 point Reticular system found on the likes of the 1DX Mk1 and Mk2 and 5DMk 3 and Mk4.

The two controls on both Nikon and Canon dictate the auto focus SOLUTION spat out by the PREDICTIVE AF ALGORITHMS contained in the cameras AF engine processors.

The subjects degree and type of motion RELATIVE to the camera position DEMAND different setups within this control panel.  It’s all to do with the camera AF resistance to MINOR and MAJOR changes in subject position between one frame and the next.

If you want a definitive understanding of all this then go and purchase my Autofocus Guide to Nikon and Canon AF for Long Lenses and Birds in Flight by clicking this link.

So this is the problem with the Nikon Z7 – because it’s utilizing so-called ‘on chip phase detect’ – which isn’t phase detect at all in reality – you cannot get control of these variable functions because they don’t exist in the cameras menu/firmware.

As far as I’m aware these sorts of controls are not available on the Sony cameras either.

But there is still a form of predictive AF algorithm at work in all mirrorless cameras, and it would appear that the one inside the Nikon Z7 is really poor in the way it’s balanced out with regard to it coping with moving subjects – especially those that move somewhat erratically and towards the camera.

Understand this people, the Nikon Z7 is a glorified D5000 that is not worth half the price you’ll have to pay for it.

Mirrorless systems have certain advantages over traditional dSLR systems:

  • Reduction in Shutter Lag times
  • Removal of Mirror Slap vibrations
  • Reduction of Weight leading to Greater Portability

But on-chip phase detection isn’t real phase detection, and it will not (for the foreseeable future) be anywhere near as fast or accurate as CORRECTLY setup phase detect autofocus on a top flight dSLR.

A sequence of 77 raw files that are all tack sharp and cover around 12 seconds of time – no mirrorless system is capable of doing this to the same degree of consistency as a correctly set dSLR.

The dSLR is NOT DEAD!

Don’t believe me?

Licensed Formula 1 pit and circuit access photographers make a very good living, and they stand or fall by the reliability of their camera gear.  But they are all business people at the end of the day.

If a Sony A9 and that fancy 400mm Sony lens was as reliable as the Sony fanboys claim it is, then why will we not see a plethora of Sony rigs at Suzuka on Sunday?  Just a thought…

But for heavens sake folks, if you have a hankering for a Nikon Z7 then PLEASE think about it – make yourself aware of the FACTS before you blow your wodge of wonga!

It’s NOT a professional camera in any way shape or form, and Dirk Jasper of Nikon Europe even says that – watch the video below at 19mins 48sec:

NOTE TO NIKON:  If you want to try and get me to change my mind then all you have to do is send me one guys!

I promise I won’t lick it or sniff it like that Jared Polin idiot!

 

 

Nikon Z System Thoughts

Nikon Z System Thoughts

Nikon Z

Looking to buy into this new system from Nikon?

My advice is simple – save your money, because the Nikon Z system appears to have ONE MASSIVE Achilles Heel.

It’s only provisioning you with one – YES, 1 – media slot.

That means you have ZERO storage media redundancy.

It doesn’t matter how quiet the new Nikon Z system Silent Shooting is, if you shoot a wedding on one of these cameras then you had better be carrying some hefty Liability insurance.

Do a corporate shoot and then try explaining why you need to do a re-shoot – you’ll never get your bill paid or work for them again!

I haven’t shot without backup ONCE since I bought my Nikon D3 11 years ago.

Leaving the photographer open to the vagaries of card failure without recourse to a redundant backup is the single biggest fubar any camera manufacturer can make.

And in this day and age it’s one that’s pretty much unforgivable in my opinion, especially when the purchase price of the Nikon Z cameras is so high.

The Sony fan club must be having a field-day with this.

For those of us who know what we’re talking about and are used to the way Nikon operate, it’ll be obvious that the Nikon Z cameras will be upgraded before too long.

And I’d bet that one feature of the upgraded models will be twin media slots!

Storage media doesn’t fail very often any more, but shooting to a single card is still a massive risk – one Nikon is in fact forcing upon you.

Nikon Z System Fallacy

Popular YouTubers like that idiot from Philadelphia have today stated that the wider 55mm Nikon Z mount lets in more light than the traditional 46.5mm F mount,  and he goes on to quote Nikon as saying it lets in 100% more light.

Let’s get one thing straight – it doesn’t and they didn’t!

The amount of light falling on the 36×24 sensor stays exactly the same.

If you look at a scene through a 4 foot square window, then switch to an 8 foot square window onto the same scene does the light from the scene go up?  No of course it bloody doesn’t!

What the 55mm Nikon Z mount does is give Nikon lens designers the ability to make lenses with WIDER internals – wider aperture holes/f-numbers.

So we can now design a lens with an aperture of f0.9 or f1.0 as opposed to f1.4 – which will indeed ‘transmit’ 100% or more light – f1.0 is 1 whole stop wider than f1.4.

But bare in mind that we are talking f-numbers here, and they actually have no true correlation with the real light output of a lens – for that we need T-stop values, and nobody’s mentioning those!

In Conclusion

It’s your money guys ‘n gals, so if you want to buy one then please feel free!

But just make sure you are aware of THE FACTS and are not being sold on THE HYPE.

Mirrorless cameras have a lot going for them – one would certainly agree with me when it comes to astro landscape photography that’s for sure.

But if I could afford to buy one just for astro then I wouldn’t touch one of these with a 10 foot pole – I’d be off down the Sony shop for sure!..and I can’t believe I just said that!

And that’s simply because of NO MEDIA BACKUP – WTF were Nikon thinking??

Z7 or D850?  D850 all day long – after all it’s got two card slots!