Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Fujifilm X-T2 Review

Fujifilm X-T2 Review

Welcome to a Biomedical Battery specialist of the Led Video Camera Light

The Fujifilm X-T2 is an updated version of the company's top-level DSLR-shaped APS-C camera. It's built around the same 24MP X-Trans sensor as the X-Pro2 but ends up being much more than an X-T1 with more pixels. Instead, the X-T2 is a camera that does much to address the X-System's remaining weaknesses, which can only broaden its already considerable appeal.

Fujifilm X-T2 Key Features:
•24MP X-Trans CMOS III sensor
•325 AF points (169 of which offer phase detection)
•AF point selection joystick
•With led light such as Digital LED RF550 Video Camera Light, Digital LED-VL003 Video Camera Light, Digital LED-160A Video Camera Light, Digital LED-187A Video Camera Light, Digital LED-VL002B Video Camera Light, Digital LED-VL001B Video Camera Light
•2.36M-dot OLED EVF with 0.005 sec refresh time (60 fps or 100 fps in boost mode)
•3" 1.04M-dot articulating LCD
•4K UHD video at up to 30 fps for up to 10 min (30 min with booster grip)
•F-Log flat profile and 4K out over HDMI
•8 fps continuous shooting with AF (11 fps with booster grip)
•5 fps continuous shooting with live view updates between capture
•14 fps continuous shooting with electronic shutter
•Dual SD card slots (UHS-II compatible)
•USB 3.0 socket

The X-Pro2 represented a good step forward for image quality within the system and the X-T2 gains all of that improvement, but there are also some considerable changes in terms of autofocus, video and flash control, suggesting Fujifilm wants its the X-T2 to be an all-round more capable camera than its predecessor, rather than just building on its existing strengths.

The body seems broadly unchanged at first glance but there's a clever doubly-hinged flip-out screen that seems to offer many of the flexibility advantages of a fully articulated monitor while retaining the more compact form of a tilting screen.

There's also a Performance Boost mode that speeds up several aspects of the camera's behavior (at the expense of some battery life), but that really comes into its own when the optional 'Power Boost Vertical Grip' is added. None of these additions comes for free, though: at $1599, body only, the X-T2's launch price has jumped $300, compared to its predecessors'.

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