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Sony A7C R Camera Review

| Uncategorized | January 1, 1970

[SECTION]INTRODUCTION[/SECTION]

Sony A7CR On Location 2
Sony A7CR On Location 2

 

Hot on the heels of the new APS-C Sony A6700, here we have the first of two new full frame models that are very similar in form factor. The first is the Sony A7C R, a high resolution model with 60MP CMOS sensor. Combining this high resolution with a more compact body, when compared to the main run of full frame bodies, seems a great idea. Let’s couple the camera up with the new Sony FE 16-35mm f/2.8 GM II lens, also currently being reviewed, and see how it all works out on location and of course also in the technical tests.
 

Sony A7C R Features

The A7C R plus the 16-35mm lens feel good in the hand and make a reasonably compact bit of kit. The body measures exactly the same dimensions as its lower resolution twin (the A7C II) at 124.0mm x 71.1mm x 63.4mm, weighing in at a not unduly heavy 515g. How portable this is will depend on the size of the lenses used, and small primes could be particularly ideal for travelling light.

Looking first at the top plate, there is the multi-function interface shoe, the usual mode dial with stills/video/S&Q selector, the command dial, video start/stop and shutter release. This mimics exactly the layout of the sister models, the A6700 APS-C and the A7C II full frame, giving us a choice of three cameras with a very similar form factor.

Sony A7CR Front Oblique View

The camera back is classic Sony, and there are no surprises here. One really useful feature is always theway the four way controller is set up, which allows instant access to drive setttings, including the self timer, the display on the monitor, the ISO setting and exposure compensation. It is all very tidy and no need for any change. The monitor itself is a touch sensitive LCD TFT and the Vari-angle design is highly practical. The Q menu button allows access to all the most commonly needed features and the main menu button is at the top of the back on a slightly sloping area.

The camera back is quite plain and devoid of clutter. There is the excellent Vari-angle monitor, the aforementioned four way controller, but no joystick for control of the focus position. Some users may miss this feature.

The baseplate has the battery compartment. The sizeable NP-FZ100 battery delivers a reasonable 580 shots when using the monitor or 490 when using the slightly more power-hungry EVF. Video shooters will be able to record up to 95 minutes continuously. It is useful to find that the same FZ100 battery is still being used. It has a very good level of capacity and is perfectly good as it is. Not having to buy another type of battery is a useful consideration.

The left side of the camera has three access doors. These reveal the single SD card slot, which is UHS-I/II compliant, the USB-C connector, the HDMI micro connector (Type-D) and the microphone and headphone sockets. It is a good choice that these are actual hinged doors rather than flexible rubber that might wear with use. Other connectivity is via the multi-function interface on the camera top plate and the usual provision of WiFi and Bluetooth, the latter having the choice of 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands.

Notably, there is an efficient 5-axis IBIS system built in, good for 7 stops advantage, and there is also an Active Mode for movie shooting. Focus breathing compensation is built in.
 

Sony A7C R Key Features

  • 60MP Exmor R CMOS Full Frame sensor
  • BionZ XR processing engine
  • Shutter 30s to 1/4000s (1/8000s electronic)
  • Shutter 8fps (Mechanical with first curtain electronic)
  • Shutter 7fps (Electronic)
  • 5-axis IBIS 7 stops
  • Pixel Shift 240MP stills
  • One SD card slot, UHS-I/II compliant
  • JPEG/10-bit HEIF/RAW
  • NP-FZ100 battery – 580 frames (monitor) 490 frames (EVF)
  • Video 95 minutes recording
  • 4K/30p no crop
  • 4K/60p 1.2x crop
  • FHD/120p no crop
  • 10-bit 4:2:2 colour
  • Supports XAVC S-1, XAVC HS, S-Log3, S-Cinetone and LUTs
  • EVF 0.39” OLED 2.36M dots, 100% coverage, 0.7x magnification
  • Monitor 7.5cm (3”) LCD Touch Sensitive 1.036M dots, Vari-angle
  • ISO 50-102400 (Extended)
  • AF range down to -3EV
  • Metering range EV -3 to +20
  • Subject detection: Human, Animal, Bird, Insect, Car, Train and Airplane
  • WiFi
  • Bluetooth 2.4GHz and 5GHz
  • Compatible with Creator’s Cloud
  • 10 Creative Look digital filters
  • Picture profles for stills and movies
  • 515g
  • 124.0mm x 71.1mm x 63.4mm
  • Dust and moisture resistance

 

Sony A7C R Handling

We were very impressed by the handling of the previously tested A6700 and this is now translated almost exactly into the full frame A7C R. However, the limiting factor, as always, will be the size of the lenses, which is where the promise of compact kit with mirrorless systems can fall down a bit. We can’t change the laws of optics, and fast zoom lenses are inevitably of a certain size. So the 16-35mm f/2.8 tested along with the camera still leaves us with a significant package that requires a camera bag to carry it in, although the slight reduction is weight and bulk is certainly there to be appreciated.

Sony A7CR With 16 35mm F2.8 GMII Close And Cropped

There are no major issues with the handling, but the minor issue of the placement of the finger rest on the on/off switch is still too far clockwise to fall naturally under the forefinger for ease of operation. This is a basic error that could be very easily corrected by looking at the larger full frame bodies and copying their arrangement. It can be acclimatised to, but it doesn’t have to be designed like this in the first place.

In all other aspects, Sony have the handling of the A7C R totally sorted out and it is a convenient, efficient and pleasurable user experience.

[SECTION]PERFORMANCE[/SECTION]

Sony A7C R Performance

The performance section is where we look at the image quality performance of the camera. Additional sample photos and product shots are available in the Equipment Database, where you can add your own review, photos and product ratings.
 

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Sony Alpha A7C R Sample Photos

Lens Performance – The Sony FE 16-35mm f/2.8 GM II lens used for this review was also tested. The conclusion was:

At 16mm, central sharpness is excellent at f/2.8 and f/4, outstanding at f/5.6 and f/8, excellent at f/11, very good at f/16 and good at f/22. The edges are excellent from f/2.8 to f/8, very good at f/11, fair at f/16 and soft at f/22.

At 20mm, central sharpness is excellent at f/2.8 and f/4, outstanding at f/5.6 and f/8, excellent at f/11, very good at f/16 and good at f/22. The edges are very good at f/2.8 and f/4, excellent at f/5.6 and f/8, very good at f/11, good at f/16 and fair at f/22.

At 24mm, central sharpness is excellent at f/2.8 and f/4, outstanding at f/5.6 and f/8, excellent at f/11, very good at f/16 and good at f/22. The edges are excellent from f/2.8 to f/8, very good at f/11, good at f/16 and fair at f/22.

At 35mm, central sharpness is outstanding from f/2.8 to f/8, excellent at f/11, very good at f/16 and good at f/22. The edges are excellent from f/2.8 to f/5.6, very good at f/8 and f/11, good at f/16 and fair at f/22.

CA (Chromatic Aberration) correction is excellent, with the centre showing very low figures that reduce further as we zoom in. The edges show a little more CA, but still generally holding to less than one third of a pixel. This is unlikely to be seen in most images, but if further reduction is required then there are software solutions.

Distortion is obvious at 16mm, where it measures -3.22% barrel. By 20mm this has reduced to -1.73% barrel, further reducing to -0.43% at 24mm. By 35mm we have +1.87% pincushion distortion. There are now some zoom lenses with much lower distortion than this, but it will also depend on how much input the camera itself has on the end result. If distortion needs reducing, then, as with CA, there are software solutions.

Flare resistance is excellent, despite the lenshood being missing with the review sample. The hood will still be desirable as it also affords some protection to the front element, but in terms of flare then things are pretty much sorted anyway.

The bokeh of the Mk I version of the lens was beautiful, and increasing the resolution seems not to have diminished that quality. Bokeh is of course in the eye of the beholder, but this reviewer slightly prefers the result with the lower resolution A7C II, which may be slightly smoother in gradation. Either way, the rssults are extremely effective.

Vignetting is at a consistent and reasonably low level.

The lens was Highly Recommended, with 4.5 stars.

 

Sony Alpha A7C R ISO test images

 

ISO Noise Performance – Noise performance just gets better and better, and the A7C R is funamentally clean all the way up to and including ISO 1600. A slight amount creeps in at ISO 3200 and 6400, but it is only at ISO 12800 that things start to rapidly deteriorate. ISO 25600 and 51200 are really only for emergency use or special effects, and by ISO 102400 the camera has totally lost the plot. This is overall an excellent result, and this reviewer would happily use ISO values up to and including ISO 6400.

 

Sony Alpha A7C R White-balance test images

 

White Balance – All the usual white balance presets are here, and of course they can be fine tuned as well to the taste of the photographer. AWB performs well, and it is joined by Daylight, Shade, Cloudy, Incandescent, 4 varieties of fluorescent (Warm White, Cool White, Day White, Daylight), Flash, Underwater Auto, Colour Temperature and 3 custom settings. Of these, Daylight is useful for maintaining the colour of the oudoor ambient light, such as a sunset. Shade will avoid purple colour casts in shadowy areas of woodland, useful when hunting fungi. Cloudy will warm an image, giving an effect similar to a Cloudy or 81A filter on film. The AWB performance in particular seems to be improving and it is hitting the spot most of the time. It is also very useful when there is mixed lighting, such as in a concert or anywhere where the light is constantly changing in colour.

 

Sony Alpha A7C R Digital filters

 

Digital Filters – There are various digital filters provided, under the title of Creative Look. These are identified by initials only, but we can get the jist of what they are as the effects are quite obvious. The options available are labelled ST, PT, NT, VV, VV2, FL, IN, SH, BW, SE, 1ST, 2FL, 3IN, 4SH, 5VV2 and 6BW. There is so much to explore. The BW selection is worth a mention as it produces a rather good black and white image with plenty of punch as it is, so with some post manipulation it has potential. The camera also has a section in the main menu labelled Picture Profiles and slots are available for the user to create particular profiles for both stills and movies. Although not billed in the menus as a digital filter, the Soft Skin Effect is a rather pleasing filter for flattering portraits, especially when added in a subtle way.

 

Video – Impromptu movies can be shot “out of the box” with excellent results, although videographers can then explore much more within the options. The basic choices are:

  • 4K/30p with no crop
  • 4K/60p with 1.2x crop
  • FHD/120p with no crop

Add 10-bit 4:2:2 colour video, picture profiles, S-Cinetone, S-Log3, breathing compensation LUTs and 16-bit RAW output via HDMI for Atomos Ninja V and we have a solid feature set.

The camera will also act as a rather classy webcam, although it seems to this reviewer that would be a bit of a waste and rather overkill.

 

[SECTION]VERDICT[/SECTION]

Sony A7CR On Location 1

Value For Money

The [AMUK]Sony A7C R|sony+a7c+r[/AMUK] is priced at £3199, body only.

The competition is keen at this price point, and there are many very viable options. Some body-only prices:

  • [AMUK]Sony A7R V|Sony+A7R+V[/AMUK], £3999
  • [AMUK]Sony A9 II|Sony+A9+II[/AMUK], £3999
  • [AMUK]Sony A7C II|Sony+A7C+II[/AMUK], £2099
  • [AMUK]Sony A7 IV|Sony+A7+IV[/AMUK], £2399

If we compare the cost of the A7C R with the full frame high resolution A7R V then of course there is a vast difference. However, the larger camera may well have advantages of its own, but only the buyer can decide whether or not those advantages are worth the premium.

If we compare with the lower resolution 24MP full frame models then the A7C R looks generally more expensive, but again if we want the resolution then the answer is clear. There are also quite a few previous models still available new, so the choice then widens even more. Sony are giving us a multitude of choices, which is fair enough, and they do also seem fair enough VFM.
 

Sony A7C R Verdict

There is no doubt that the new A7C R is a terrific and very enjoyable camera to use. Performance is excellent, handling is excellent and the price, although still a fair bit of cash, is probably reasonable.

The 60MP sensor delivers superb quality and the potentail is there for using Pixel Shift to produce 240MP images. Staightforward videography is well supported without actually becoming a video camera. It’s all quite a package and at a considerably lower price level that the A7R V. Of course, some may think that 60MP is not necessary and if that is the case then there are plenty of other choices within the Sony range, or indeed with other marques. However, if we want the resolution then the A7C R is an excellent choice and has earned its place for a Highly Recommended award.

Sony A7C R Pros

  • Excellent quality of results
  • Incredible detail from 60MP sensor
  • Excellent handling
  • Light and compact
  • Sturdy construction
  • Excellent connectivity
  • Excellent specs for stills and video
  • 7 stop IBIS
  • Dust and moisture resistant

 

Sony A7C R Cons

  • Only one SD card slot
  • On/off switch slightly awkward

 

[REVIEW_FOOTER]R_features=4.5|R_handling=5|R_performance=5|R_value=4.5|R_overall=4.5|A_level=4.5|A_text=Highly Recommended – Superb quality, great handling and a very pleasing user experience all round.|E_id=8016[/REVIEW_FOOTER]

 

View the Sony A7C R camera specs in the equipment database

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Source: Photography News
Sony A7C R Camera Review
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