The Amazing Sony A1/A7/A9/APS-C & Anything else welcome Mega Thread!

I just bought a 55" OLED tv instead.

Time to replace an old Plasma with light leaks and shadow patches...lol
I was a big Plasma fan back in the days when Panasonic & Pioneer ruled.
OLED is amazingly good, which one did you go for? :)
 
I was a big Plasma fan back in the days when Panasonic & Pioneer ruled.
OLED is amazingly good, which one did you go for? :)

I have had 2 Panasonic Plasma. The smaller 42" one still works. They are good but compared to OLED the blacks are on another planet on the OLED.

I went for the "cheapest" one. Philips 754, i draw the line at £1k (arbitrary) and this is under that at the moment at Richer Sounds with 6yr warranty. It is essentially a LG rebanded panel underneath.
 
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I have had 2 Panasonic Plasma. The smaller 42" one still works. They are good but compared to OLED the blacks are on another planet on the OLED.

I went for the "cheapest" one. Philips 754, i draw the line at £1k (arbitrary) and this is under that at the moment at Richer Sounds with 6yr warranty.
Great stuff..... and yes, the OLED blacks are amazingly good. :)
I had a Panasonic 42" PH9 display.... still have it boxed away with the input boards! lol :o
 
More on the troubled A7 saga... I've just had a nice email exchange with Fixation...

Me... "I have a Sony A7 which seems to have a problem and I’m hoping you can fix it for me. It seems to be front focusing. With a f1.8 lens and at close distances but beyond the minimum close focus distance it seems to be focusing anywhere between 5 and 20mm in front of the point I want in focus depending on the distances. It’s so predictable that I can compensate for it by aiming past the point I want to be the point of focus. It’s pretty obvious when taking pictures of flowers and leaves etc and I’ve tried a ruler at an angle indoors to confirm all this.

I’ve tried my 35, 55 and 85mm f1.8 lenses and all do the same. Manual focus is perfectly ok and focusing at a distance with AF seems ok but of course focus errors at a distance may be covered by the increased DoF.

I use manual lenses a lot so I only noticed this recently but just in case it gives you a clue I think it first happened after I left the camera without a battery in it for a week or so. When I turned the camera on it had lost it’s time, date and region. I’ve since done a reset and updated the firmware from 2 to 3.2 and it’s still front focusing."

Fixation... "Thank you for your email. It's a rather unusual problem as mirrorless cameras, where focus is calculated on the sensor itself, are largely free from the front/back focusing issues that can affect DSLRs, especially if the AF system is a contrast detection-only one as with your A7. By and large the fact that the internal battery has run flat at some point should not have affected the autofocus - if anything the fact that the issue occurs with all three FE lenses would normally point to the flange distance being ever so slightly off, which could in fact offset the focal plane at close distances (as you say, at longer distances or at infinity any minor focal plane misalignments would be hidden by the wider depth of field).

My only suggestion would be to send in the camera for a check, ideally with some of the test images you've taken stored on the memory card. We don't operate on a fixed-price basis and it's hard to offer an informed comment, much less a quote, without seeing and testing the camera first but as a rough ballpark, if it is a flange distance issue I reckon re-adjusting it would likely cost about £100-120 plus VAT - if any parts needed replacing (eg lens mount, lens contacts etc) these would be on top.

However, we do not charge for providing a free, no obligation estimate based on proper investigation.
More details on our service can be found..."

That's nice of them.

I've been doubting myself and wondering if I'm expecting too much of the AF but then I remember that I've had this camera 6 years and in that time I've taken a lot of close up pictures and haven't seen this anything like this before. As a double check I've just tried my Panasonic GX9 at f1.8 and although that's a x 2 crop camera it focuses a lot closer so I think it's a valid test and it's bang on.

My brain can't work out what could cause the flange to be at the wrong distance or what effect this would have as the focus is taken off the sensor so surely it'd cope with a minor offset but I suppose it's as good a theory as any. I might send it off and see what happens. I hope it doesn't come back No Fault Found.

This reminds me of something I used to fix... we had a whole shelf full of these things and no one could work out what the fault was caused by until clever clogs me fixed them all. To everyone else the duff component maybe couldn't have been more physically and electrically isolated from the fault and even I couldn't say exactly why it had the effect it did but sometimes you just have to fix the fault and not waste too much brain power on the theory :D

I have heard mostly good things out of fixation recently in terms of service.

So if you are convinced its the body then it might be worth sending it in for a free quote.
 
I have heard mostly good things out of fixation recently in terms of service.

So if you are convinced its the body then it might be worth sending it in for a free quote.

Unless he is able to drop it in you do have to pay shipping both there and for them to ship it back. Based on what they said it will be a couple of hundred quid minimum plus the shipping there and back so maybe not worth it.
 
Unless he is able to drop it in you do have to pay shipping both there and for them to ship it back. Based on what they said it will be a couple of hundred quid minimum plus the shipping there and back so maybe not worth it.
My thoughts too, time to buy a new body.... he's got his monies worth out of it :)
 
@woof woof looks this the sexy body....... you know you what one.... :D
48430580507_a33a192f08_c.jpg

48430437581_8e12f38693_c.jpg
 
I know someone selling an A7R (original) with a few extras for £600. Around 5K shutter count.
@woof woof might be better for your style of shooting. Let me know if you or any one here is interested in it. I'll talk to him :)
 
More on the troubled A7 saga... I've just had a nice email exchange with Fixation...

Me... "I have a Sony A7 which seems to have a problem and I’m hoping you can fix it for me. It seems to be front focusing. With a f1.8 lens and at close distances but beyond the minimum close focus distance it seems to be focusing anywhere between 5 and 20mm in front of the point I want in focus depending on the distances. It’s so predictable that I can compensate for it by aiming past the point I want to be the point of focus. It’s pretty obvious when taking pictures of flowers and leaves etc and I’ve tried a ruler at an angle indoors to confirm all this.

I’ve tried my 35, 55 and 85mm f1.8 lenses and all do the same. Manual focus is perfectly ok and focusing at a distance with AF seems ok but of course focus errors at a distance may be covered by the increased DoF.

I use manual lenses a lot so I only noticed this recently but just in case it gives you a clue I think it first happened after I left the camera without a battery in it for a week or so. When I turned the camera on it had lost it’s time, date and region. I’ve since done a reset and updated the firmware from 2 to 3.2 and it’s still front focusing."

Fixation... "Thank you for your email. It's a rather unusual problem as mirrorless cameras, where focus is calculated on the sensor itself, are largely free from the front/back focusing issues that can affect DSLRs, especially if the AF system is a contrast detection-only one as with your A7. By and large the fact that the internal battery has run flat at some point should not have affected the autofocus - if anything the fact that the issue occurs with all three FE lenses would normally point to the flange distance being ever so slightly off, which could in fact offset the focal plane at close distances (as you say, at longer distances or at infinity any minor focal plane misalignments would be hidden by the wider depth of field).

My only suggestion would be to send in the camera for a check, ideally with some of the test images you've taken stored on the memory card. We don't operate on a fixed-price basis and it's hard to offer an informed comment, much less a quote, without seeing and testing the camera first but as a rough ballpark, if it is a flange distance issue I reckon re-adjusting it would likely cost about £100-120 plus VAT - if any parts needed replacing (eg lens mount, lens contacts etc) these would be on top.

However, we do not charge for providing a free, no obligation estimate based on proper investigation.
More details on our service can be found..."

That's nice of them.

I've been doubting myself and wondering if I'm expecting too much of the AF but then I remember that I've had this camera 6 years and in that time I've taken a lot of close up pictures and haven't seen this anything like this before. As a double check I've just tried my Panasonic GX9 at f1.8 and although that's a x 2 crop camera it focuses a lot closer so I think it's a valid test and it's bang on.

My brain can't work out what could cause the flange to be at the wrong distance or what effect this would have as the focus is taken off the sensor so surely it'd cope with a minor offset but I suppose it's as good a theory as any. I might send it off and see what happens. I hope it doesn't come back No Fault Found.

This reminds me of something I used to fix... we had a whole shelf full of these things and no one could work out what the fault was caused by until clever clogs me fixed them all. To everyone else the duff component maybe couldn't have been more physically and electrically isolated from the fault and even I couldn't say exactly why it had the effect it did but sometimes you just have to fix the fault and not waste too much brain power on the theory :D

Send it off, it'll cost you about £20 there and back fully insured, if the quote comes to 200 quid then keep it for use with manual lenses and buy a second body for AF if you really need it. Seems to make the most sense?

Have you checked whether the mount screws are all tight?
 
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I have had 2 Panasonic Plasma. The smaller 42" one still works. They are good but compared to OLED the blacks are on another planet on the OLED.

I went for the "cheapest" one. Philips 754, i draw the line at £1k (arbitrary) and this is under that at the moment at Richer Sounds with 6yr warranty. It is essentially a LG rebanded panel underneath.

I was put of by oled as I game a lot.

Went for the Sony fx9005 which is lovely, a year on and it still impresses me
 
I was put of by oled as I game a lot.

Went for the Sony fx9005 which is lovely, a year on and it still impresses me

Gaming is not a requisite, even though i have all the consoles. The games that I play don't matter that much as I don't play FPS or fast action stuff. At most I play something like Tomb Raider, Nier Automata.

Movies and YouTube is what I use the TV the most.
 
I was put of by oled as I game a lot.

Went for the Sony fx9005 which is lovely, a year on and it still impresses me

Am a heavy game user no issues at all
 
Any here use topaz lab software
 
Just that my LR is due for renewal.. Always looking for a good alternative and never get anywhere
 
@rookies .... go for Capture 1, I like it as it suits my workflow and I can edit with Loupedeck +
 
Just that my LR is due for renewal.. Always looking for a good alternative and never get anywhere

That's the problem everyone seems to be struggling to realise most want a DAM!! Affinity come on!!!! The other issue I have is that I have a lot of processed files, as do most and that XML translation doesnt work well.
 
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@rookies ..I have the Sony version and the Fuji version.
 
LR is pretty much only one out there that does most things I would want out a postprocessing software and does it acceptably well.

Yeah, Im also tied into Adobes other products in my industry so it makes sense. Ive been fortunate to use my work CC license at home for a very long time... but might be wise to buy my own this year.

Black Friday tomorrow so we'll see a LR + PS package for a good price anyway.
 
Yeah, Im also tied into Adobes other products in my industry so it makes sense. Ive been fortunate to use my work CC license at home for a very long time... but might be wise to buy my own this year.

Black Friday tomorrow so we'll see a LR + PS package for a good price anyway.

Am hoping for this. If you see anything pls tell
 
I just bought a 55" OLED tv instead.

Time to replace an old Plasma with light leaks and shadow patches...lol

Nice treat! I owned one of the Pioneer Plasmas at the same time they compared it with the Kuro, TVs were so bloody expensive then.

Now have a tx65ex750b.
 
Nice treat! I owned one of the Pioneer Plasmas at the same time they compared it with the Kuro, TVs were so bloody expensive then.

Now have a tx65ex750b.

LED is SO cheap now but I have been waiting for OLED to become under £1k. I promised myself I will wait and wait and wait....and the day finally came today. When a 65" becomes under £1k, by that point TV will be 8k by then and that's when i will upgrade again.

I suspect this will do well for 5+ years.
 
LED is SO cheap now but I have been waiting for OLED to become under £1k. I promised myself I will wait and wait and wait....and the day finally came today. When a 65" becomes under £1k, by that point TV will be 8k by then and that's when i will upgrade again.

I suspect this will do well for 5+ years.

When I looked Oled was still 1.5k, my numbers also 1k for a TV but I didn't want to wait any longer.
 
Ive got On1 2020 too it quite good but just not LR yet that the problem
 
More on the troubled A7 saga... I've just had a nice email exchange with Fixation...

Me... "I have a Sony A7 which seems to have a problem and I’m hoping you can fix it for me. It seems to be front focusing. With a f1.8 lens and at close distances but beyond the minimum close focus distance it seems to be focusing anywhere between 5 and 20mm in front of the point I want in focus depending on the distances. It’s so predictable that I can compensate for it by aiming past the point I want to be the point of focus. It’s pretty obvious when taking pictures of flowers and leaves etc and I’ve tried a ruler at an angle indoors to confirm all this.

I’ve tried my 35, 55 and 85mm f1.8 lenses and all do the same. Manual focus is perfectly ok and focusing at a distance with AF seems ok but of course focus errors at a distance may be covered by the increased DoF.

I use manual lenses a lot so I only noticed this recently but just in case it gives you a clue I think it first happened after I left the camera without a battery in it for a week or so. When I turned the camera on it had lost it’s time, date and region. I’ve since done a reset and updated the firmware from 2 to 3.2 and it’s still front focusing."

Fixation... "Thank you for your email. It's a rather unusual problem as mirrorless cameras, where focus is calculated on the sensor itself, are largely free from the front/back focusing issues that can affect DSLRs, especially if the AF system is a contrast detection-only one as with your A7. By and large the fact that the internal battery has run flat at some point should not have affected the autofocus - if anything the fact that the issue occurs with all three FE lenses would normally point to the flange distance being ever so slightly off, which could in fact offset the focal plane at close distances (as you say, at longer distances or at infinity any minor focal plane misalignments would be hidden by the wider depth of field).

My only suggestion would be to send in the camera for a check, ideally with some of the test images you've taken stored on the memory card. We don't operate on a fixed-price basis and it's hard to offer an informed comment, much less a quote, without seeing and testing the camera first but as a rough ballpark, if it is a flange distance issue I reckon re-adjusting it would likely cost about £100-120 plus VAT - if any parts needed replacing (eg lens mount, lens contacts etc) these would be on top.

However, we do not charge for providing a free, no obligation estimate based on proper investigation.
More details on our service can be found..."

That's nice of them.

I've been doubting myself and wondering if I'm expecting too much of the AF but then I remember that I've had this camera 6 years and in that time I've taken a lot of close up pictures and haven't seen this anything like this before. As a double check I've just tried my Panasonic GX9 at f1.8 and although that's a x 2 crop camera it focuses a lot closer so I think it's a valid test and it's bang on.

My brain can't work out what could cause the flange to be at the wrong distance or what effect this would have as the focus is taken off the sensor so surely it'd cope with a minor offset but I suppose it's as good a theory as any. I might send it off and see what happens. I hope it doesn't come back No Fault Found.

This reminds me of something I used to fix... we had a whole shelf full of these things and no one could work out what the fault was caused by until clever clogs me fixed them all. To everyone else the duff component maybe couldn't have been more physically and electrically isolated from the fault and even I couldn't say exactly why it had the effect it did but sometimes you just have to fix the fault and not waste too much brain power on the theory :D
Check the screws on the lens mount are tight
 
Am a heavy game user no issues at all

Plenty of screen burn reports on AV forums alone, enough that I’m not willing to run the risk as it’s not covered by warranty

I’m not sure what u class as heavy gaming but I’m on average a min 3 hours a day(upto 5 at weekends) .only playing the one game with a hud that doesn’t change.
 
Plenty of screen burn reports on AV forums alone, enough that I’m not willing to run the risk as it’s not covered by warranty

I’m not sure what u class as heavy gaming but I’m on average a min 3 hours a day(upto 5 at weekends) .only playing the one game with a hud that doesn’t change.

Well that me i on on 3 - 4 hours ever day.. COD most of the time
 
The Sony FE 70-200mm f4 G OSS is a stunningly good lens for the money.
Here are some early photos I took with it..... https://www.flickr.com/photos/rizvanhussain/albums/72157645949808315
:)
I’ve been impressed with the 70-200 f4. I don’t use it a lot as I have the 100-400 for wildlife so it’s mainly a lighter weight landscape option. That said I was trying to sell it as it didn’t seem to make sense have both but it feels too good to sell even if I dong use it that much.
 
I’ve been impressed with the 70-200 f4. I don’t use it a lot as I have the 100-400 for wildlife so it’s mainly a lighter weight landscape option. That said I was trying to sell it as it didn’t seem to make sense have both but it feels too good to sell even if I dong use it that much.

The 100-400 is another i would like one day
 
Check amazon in the morning mate, likely to be £70 for a year again.

Be interesting to see if they do a lot of people seem to think that they won’t this year as they are wanting to push people down the cc route which is why it’s already been on offer.

Glad I stacked a few up last time around although would maybe grab another if it does go on offer.
 
More on the troubled A7 saga... I've just had a nice email exchange with Fixation...

Me... "I have a Sony A7 which seems to have a problem and I’m hoping you can fix it for me. It seems to be front focusing. With a f1.8 lens and at close distances but beyond the minimum close focus distance it seems to be focusing anywhere between 5 and 20mm in front of the point I want in focus depending on the distances. It’s so predictable that I can compensate for it by aiming past the point I want to be the point of focus. It’s pretty obvious when taking pictures of flowers and leaves etc and I’ve tried a ruler at an angle indoors to confirm all this.

I’ve tried my 35, 55 and 85mm f1.8 lenses and all do the same. Manual focus is perfectly ok and focusing at a distance with AF seems ok but of course focus errors at a distance may be covered by the increased DoF.

I use manual lenses a lot so I only noticed this recently but just in case it gives you a clue I think it first happened after I left the camera without a battery in it for a week or so. When I turned the camera on it had lost it’s time, date and region. I’ve since done a reset and updated the firmware from 2 to 3.2 and it’s still front focusing."

Fixation... "Thank you for your email. It's a rather unusual problem as mirrorless cameras, where focus is calculated on the sensor itself, are largely free from the front/back focusing issues that can affect DSLRs, especially if the AF system is a contrast detection-only one as with your A7. By and large the fact that the internal battery has run flat at some point should not have affected the autofocus - if anything the fact that the issue occurs with all three FE lenses would normally point to the flange distance being ever so slightly off, which could in fact offset the focal plane at close distances (as you say, at longer distances or at infinity any minor focal plane misalignments would be hidden by the wider depth of field).

My only suggestion would be to send in the camera for a check, ideally with some of the test images you've taken stored on the memory card. We don't operate on a fixed-price basis and it's hard to offer an informed comment, much less a quote, without seeing and testing the camera first but as a rough ballpark, if it is a flange distance issue I reckon re-adjusting it would likely cost about £100-120 plus VAT - if any parts needed replacing (eg lens mount, lens contacts etc) these would be on top.

However, we do not charge for providing a free, no obligation estimate based on proper investigation.
More details on our service can be found..."

That's nice of them.

I've been doubting myself and wondering if I'm expecting too much of the AF but then I remember that I've had this camera 6 years and in that time I've taken a lot of close up pictures and haven't seen this anything like this before. As a double check I've just tried my Panasonic GX9 at f1.8 and although that's a x 2 crop camera it focuses a lot closer so I think it's a valid test and it's bang on.

My brain can't work out what could cause the flange to be at the wrong distance or what effect this would have as the focus is taken off the sensor so surely it'd cope with a minor offset but I suppose it's as good a theory as any. I might send it off and see what happens. I hope it doesn't come back No Fault Found.

This reminds me of something I used to fix... we had a whole shelf full of these things and no one could work out what the fault was caused by until clever clogs me fixed them all. To everyone else the duff component maybe couldn't have been more physically and electrically isolated from the fault and even I couldn't say exactly why it had the effect it did but sometimes you just have to fix the fault and not waste too much brain power on the theory :D
Maybe @Diamonddec can tell you about his front focussing saga and how it was dealt with?
 
Have stuck one of my A7III's in the classifieds not that it will sell on here. Nothing seems too :ROFLMAO:

Just needs to be the right price. :)

I popped my Nikon fit 12-24 on there Thursday last week and it sold by Friday morning. But I agree the sales area is dog-slow these days.
 
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