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Sony α7R IV Cámara de Lente Intercambiable sin Espejo de Marco Completo (ILCE7RM4/B)

Envío gratis en pedidos superiores a Mex $600.00

Mex $63,162.00

Mex $ 1,881 .00 Mex $1,881.00

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1.Estilo:Solo Cuerpo


2.Configuración:Base


Acerca de este artículo

  • Resolución impresionante: el primer sensor de imagen CMOS Exmore R de 61 MP de marco completo de 35 mm con retroiluminación del mundo. El producto es compatible con Final Cut Pro X e iMovie
  • En la caja: cable de alimentación, batería, protector de cable, cargador, correa, gorras de cuerpo/zapatos, ocular, cable USB
  • Alta velocidad: disparo continuo de hasta 10 Fps a 61 MP con seguimiento AE/AF; 26. 2 MP en modo de recorte APS-C
  • Enfoque automático híbrido rápido: 567 puntos AF de detección de fases y 425 puntos AF de contraste para cubrir más área
  • Reconocimiento avanzado del tema: seguimiento en tiempo real y AF ocular en tiempo real para humanos, animales y películas
  • Reproducción precisa del color: rango dinámico de 15 paradas a bajas sensibilidades para una mayor precisión del color
  • Detalles increíbles: ver detalles finos con la reducción de ruido específica del área del procesador Sony BIONZ x
  • Video 4K: lectura completa de píxeles sin vinculación en modo súper 35 mm; características de grabación S y HLG
  • Visor electrónico: cámaras compactas con alta resolución. 5. Localizador de realidad OLED UXGA de 76 millones de puntos
  • Especificaciones: salida bruta de 14 bits, es 50-102400, función remota inalámbrica de PC, Wi-Fi máximo de 5 GHz, transferencia FTP


ILCE-7RM4A


Sudhanshu Shekhar Mishra
Comentado en India el 4 de diciembre de 2024
Easy to handle.Silent operation. Amazing picture quality. Good range of excellent lenses. Bit expensive though.
Arup Das
Comentado en India el 22 de septiembre de 2022
I have Sony A7M3 & this is my second camera. The A7RM4A is one of the best camera from the Sony platform. If resolution and details are what you are looking for, close your eyes and go for it. ❤️
Y. Wang
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 8 de julio de 2021
I have owned every A7r camera including the original, A7rii, A7riii, and now the A7riv. The A7riv is the first big image quality improvement in years! Is it worth it to upgrade to 60MP? Definitely but be aware that this still a specialized camera and not an action camera.The camera industry remained stead at the 24MP range for years now. In the past year the Canon R5 and R6 cameras have pushed the envelope and the new megapixel race is back in full swing. Usually high megapixel wars were more about bragging rights and marketing than actual usability. Noise and image quality decreases with higher resolutions due to smaller physical pixels. This remains true with the A7riv's 60MP sensor over the A7riii's 42MP. However the increased resolution minimalizes the perceivable noise increase (You won't see it unless you pixel peep). In addition, the higher resolution helps with sharpness, contrast, and cropping flexibility across the board and you get an overall better camera.The Good:Image Quality. As mentioned above 60MP improves sharpness and cropping flexibility. There is some degradation of dynamic range and noisier ISOs. But again, since the resolution is much finer, the small amounts of noise introduced is much less noticeable at these resolutions. When used with uncompressed RAW (see below) you get much better ISO and dynamic range.Cropping. I cannot emphasize the ability to crop with 60MP. The larger megapixel count gives greater range of flexibility to crop, refocus, and recompose photos in post. Often I change the entire composition of a photo with extreme cropping of my A7riv files. You can change full body portraits into headshots and retain excellent sharpness. Reframe centered subjects to align with rule of thirds or vice versa. The ability recompose shots afterwards is amazing!Autofocus. The A7riv has a significantly improved AF that covers much more of the sensor than the A7riii. The A7riii just added a few more contrast detection points over the A7rii but the A7riv has PDAF points nearly covering the entire sensor. With my A7riii it was very difficult to eye-AF on subjects on the corners of the sensor. With the A7riv, unless your subject is on the very edge of the sensor, you will have full AF functionality including eye-AF. Furthermore the AF is much snappier and eye-AF finds the eye faster and stays locked on in dimmer conditions and further away than the A7riii.Battery. The camera still uses the newer Z batteries that comes with the newer generation of Sony cameras. The Z Batteries have doubled life over the older W batteries. Getting such a long runtime with such a high MP camera is pretty great.IBIS stabilization. Sony was one of the first large companies to use IBIS in full frame cameras. 5.5 stops of stabilization is amazing and still makes handheld slow light photos seem like they were on a tripod. I am still amazed by this feature sometimes. Tests do show that in real world tests the A7riv has slightly better IBIS stabilization than the A7riii.Ergonomics/usability: Not much has changed over the A7riii. Every year, each new version of the camera is bigger, thicker, and heavier. The joystick feels nicer and the shape is more comfortable. The camera itself is slightly thicker which is better to hold for your hands. There are no glaring issues here.The bad:Dynamic Range. Dynamic range is on par with other cameras of this generation. However shadow recovery is slightly worse than the A7riii. This is mainly due to the use of Compressed RAW setting with continuous shooting. When using Compressed Raw and continuous/burst mode, the camera shoots at 12-bit instead of 14 bit. If you shoot in single shots with uncompressed RAW you can get much better dynamic range and shadow recovery. 60Mp files are huge and not easy to process and this camera is NOT an action camera. But the fact that you can get 10fps with a 60mp camera even at 12-bit is still pretty amazing.Processing speed: With 60MP, writing to SD cards is even slower than before. As previously mentioned you can improve image quality by using uncompressed raw which DOUBLES file sizes from around 59mb to around 117mb. This makes writing to a regular 90/95mb/s USH-I card EVEN SLOWER. You can't review images after each shot without waiting for the writing to clear. With continuous multiple shots it takes EVEN SLOWER! You can help alleviate this problem with faster UHS-II 300mb/s cards but at the time of this review these cards are RIDICULOUSLY EXPENSIVE. Sony really needs to implement compressed lossless RAW files as 60MP is nearing the limit and resolution will continue to creep up.Speed. This is not an action or sports camera, but it CAN handle some action at 10fps. As mentioned previously, shooting in burst and continuous does reduce quality a bit. If you are a wedding photographer or lifestyle/street photographer this will be fine for your needs. However if you are shooting sports, dance, motion, a dedicated action sports camera that can handle the speed without quality loss like the A1 or A9 would be better suited for you.Pixel shift. Pixel shift is a great feature on paper. The sensor shifts very slightly letting you get significantly better quality images by using quadrupling the color information in each pixel. However realistically you can't use it without some smearing or ghosting. Unless you are using it for perfectly static scenes you will get some sort of smearing. Wind moving tree leaves or grass, moving cars in cityscapes, any movement will throw off the sensor. I have never meaningfully used this feature. Additionally you need Sony's Edge software to compile the images which just adds to the processing steps.This is a great camera and a phenomenal upgrade. It does however have some limitations. For years the A7r series was the flagship camera of Sony's line. However we must remember this is really geared for landscapes and studio work were lighting conditions are controlled and you don't need to shoot fast action. Sony has diversified with the A9 and A1 line with the A9 being sports and the A1 being the dedicated all-around flagship camera with little compromises. For your everyday photographer who is not shooting ballet dancers or basketball games regularly, this should be perfectly suitable for their needs. Even professional wedding and street photographers will find little to complain about. Only the most demanding action photographers pushing the limits will want more.
Ann
Comentado en Canadá el 18 de diciembre de 2019
Incredible camera. I upgraded from the A7iii and I am amazed by the picture quality and the ability to crop the photos and still retain the resolution. I took it on a recent trip to Key West for a wild dolphins watch. I am so glad I brought the A7riv with me. I was able to take some amazing pics of the dolphins from far away using the Tamron 28-75mm f/2.8 and then crop in. The focus tracking works amazingly well as well. Noise is definitely worst then the A7iii in low light situation. But I am willing to live with that with all the other amazing features of the A7Riv.
shanshrrtmd
Comentado en Canadá el 20 de octubre de 2019
Great all around camera. Only issue is navigating Sony menu on the camera.
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