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- Alan
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There is a slight quality advantage looking at numbers, but it is those mirrorless advantages you speak of that means I have much more success.
Faster focus, focus tracking, faster burst speed and pre-burst, 1.2kg and shorter to try and keep the bird in the frame and to carry to where ever I am going, near/far focus when the bird is in a tree with branches close by, electronic shutter.
The two set ups are very close in price looking at ebays completed listings, but many of the Canons have high shutter counts.
I can't say which way the OP should go, can only say what my experience has been, what I like, and what helps me to get the results I want.
Not trying to convince him to go the same way, or any other way, just saying what I like in case that can be related to and helps him build opinions leading to a good decision.
The OP has produced some nice photos, would they be better had he have used the Canon set-up? Who can say![]()
Off and on I have spent time looking at the various differences between MFT, APS-C and FF. My own HO is that there isn't enough in it between MFT and APS-C and that only FF shows any real step forward worth bothering with. In good or just ok-ish light and if we can avoid cropping and pixel peeping I suppose there's an argument for saying that MFT, APS-C, FF... it doesn't matter all that much. So I think the first thing for Keith to decide is do the image quality differences between the various options matter at all?
Mirrorless v DSLR is another question and I'm just not going back



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