Sony Revives Superzoom Camera With RX10 V After Nine-Year Wait – channelnews
Sony says the RX10 V adds Alpha-style autofocus and 4K 120p video, with up to 630 shots per charge and a A$3,499 launch price.
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Sony just revived it's RX10 V bridge camera with a built-in massive zoom lens
Sony released the last version of its all-in-one camera, the RX10 IV, all the way back in 2017. Released today, the new Sony RX10 V pairs the series’ signature 24-600mm equivalent ZEISS zoom with Alpha-grade AI autofocus for $2,299.99, shipping in August. There isn’t much competition left in the bridge camera category, which is made up of cameras with attached zoom lenses that mimic the experience of a DSLR or mirrorless model. It’s a lot of le…
Sony RX10 V Camera Price, Specifications and Features Revealed | 📲 LatestLY
Sony has launched the RX10 V superzoom camera, featuring a 24-600mm lens, 30 fps burst shooting, and 4K 60 fps video recording. Building on the RX10 IV, the new model includes an advanced 575-point autofocus system and a 6,000-plus shot battery. It is currently available for pre-order at USD 2,300. 📲 Sony RX10 V Camera Price, Specifications and Features Revealed.
Sony debuts RX10 V, its first new all-in-one camera in years
Sony recently announced the RX10 V all-in-one camera, the first new model in the series in years, with plenty of zoom and more battery life than its predecessor. Sony’s new kit comes in a form factor known by photographers as a ‘bridge camera’. It’s a bit more than a point-and-shoot camera, but it doesn’t have the interchangeable lens design of a DSLR. Put more simply, bridge cameras provide the convenience of a point-and-shoot camera, but with …
Sony Revives Superzoom Camera With RX10 V After Nine-Year Wait – channelnews
Sony has revived its premium superzoom camera line after a nine-year gap, unveiling the RX10 V with faster autofocus, upgraded video features and a price tag that pushes deep into mirrorless camera territory. The new bridge camera succeeds the RX10 IV and keeps the same core formula: a fixed ZEISS Vario-Sonnar T* 24-600mm equivalent F2.4-4.0 lens paired with a 20.1-megapixel 1-inch stacked Exmor RS CMOS sensor. That gives photographers a 25x optical zoom range in a single body, covering everything from landscapes and travel shots to wildlife, sport and close-up work without needing to swap lenses. The major upgrades are inside. Sony has added its BIONZ XR processor and a dedicated AI processing unit, bringing Real-time Recognition Autofocus from its Alpha mirrorless cameras. The RX10 V can recognise and track people, animals, birds, insects, cars, trains and aircraft. It can also follow humans even when their face or eyes are not visible. For action shooting, the camera can fire at up to 30 frames per second with blackout-free viewing using the electronic shutter, backed by up to 60 autofocus and auto exposure calculations per second. Video has received one of the biggest boosts. The RX10 V can record 4K at up to 60p using the full sensor width, or 4K 120p with a crop for slow-motion footage. It also supports 10-bit recording, S-Cinetone, S-Log3, custom LUT previews and 4K 30p live streaming. Sony has also redesigned the body with a layout closer to its Alpha cameras, including a larger grip, joystick, extra control dials and a higher-resolution 3.68-million-dot OLED viewfinder. The rear LCD has been upgraded to 1.62 million dots, although it still tilts rather than fully articulating. Battery life has improved due to Sony’s NP-FZ100 battery, rated at up to 630 shots per charge. USB-C, dual-band Wi-Fi, mic and headphone ports, a UHS-II SD card slot and dust and moisture resistance are also included. The trade-off is price. The RX10 V will launch in August at A$3,499. At that level, Sony is targeting serious users who want a powerful all-in-one wildlife, sport and travel camera, rather than casual compact camera buyers.
Sony Electronics Introduces RX10 V - The Fifth Generation of the All-in-One Super Zoom Camera for Travel, Wildlife, and Sports Photography
/PRNewswire/ -- Sony Electronics announces the RX10 V, the fifth generation of its RX10 all-in-one camera series. A single body covers wide-angle to...
Sony RX10 V vs Sony Cyber-shot RX10 IV: I love this classic wildlife camera’s upgrades after a nine-year wait, but there’s one big drawback
Sony RX10 V Sony Cyber-shot RX10 IV Fan reacted with dismay when Sony seemingly phased out its range of bridge cameras, with the CyberShot RX10 IV being discontinued in 2024. After all, these relatively lightweight and highly versatile superzoom cameras can shoot anything from landscapes to distant wildlife and macro, and Sony's was the best of its kind. It’s not just Sony, mind you — I’ve looked after TechRadar’s best bridge cameras guide since…
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