Camera Digital Sony Alpha A900 24.6mp
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Review based on a production Alpha DSLR-A900
In the cut-throat digital camera market it's increasingly unusual for products to be shown in prototype form or announced more than a matter of weeks before they hit the stores. There's several reasons for the manufacturers' habit of playing their cards so close to their chests, not least that they can't afford to harm sales of the models they've already released. Sony, the newest 'new kid' on the DLSR block, has no such worries, this being its first proper 'high end' DSLR. In fact, if anything the pressure was on the company to show it was committed to becoming a major SLR system player and that it wasn't going to squander Minolta's long legacy in this market after picking up the assets Konica Minolta shed when it pulled out of the photography market. Thus we saw the first prototype of the Alpha 900 - Sony's flagship full frame digital SLR - back in early 2007 (it appeared behind glass at trade shows such as PMA in March 07), and information has been trickling out ever since; most significantly with the announcement in January of this year of a 35mm full frame CMOS sensor.
And so when Sony finally showed the finished Alpha 900 to us back in the late summer there were few surprises at the basic specification or the appearance of the camera. As we started to dig a little deeper, pore over the fine print and actually use the Alpha 900 we were, however, increasingly surprised - and almost always pleasantly so - at some of the decisions made by Sony's engineers when designing its flagship SLR.
The success of the Alpha 900 amongst the Minolta, Konica Minolta and Sony faithful seems assured; at a launch price of just shy of $3000 it offers a lot of 'bang for your buck' and there is undoubtedly a significant number of Minolta film SLR users who've been waiting years for a full frame digital body on which to use their existing lenses. The challenge for Sony, however, is to generate some interest from people without an existing investment in the Minolta (or subsequent Alpha) system. And on paper the Alpha 900 looks promising - and we're already impressed with the build, handling and viewfinder, so let's find out how well the latest addition to the small but growing 'full frame club' performs.
As someone who has used the Alpha 700 extensively I was immediately struck by just how similar its new big brother is; the basic design and layout is almost identical, as are the user interface and the core feature set. Unlike Canon and Nikon, who tend to add further differentiation to their professional products with swathes of extra features and (especially) custom function options, Sony has gone for almost total consistency between the A700 and A900.
Obviously there are some pretty significant differences both physically and functionally (some of which are upgrades we'd expect to see in the Alpha 700's eventual replacement); aside from the obvious (sensor size/resolution) the key changes are:
![]() Sony Alpha A900 |
![]() Sony Alpha A700 |
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| Body material | ? Magnesium Alloy Chassis and exterior ? Environmental seals |
? Aluminum chassis ? Magnesium Alloy body shell ? high grade plastic exterior ? Environmental seals |
| Sensor | ? 35.9 x 24.0 mm CMOS sensor 'Exmor' ? RGB Color Filter Array ? Built-in fixed low-pass filter ? 25.7 million total pixels ? 24.6 million effective pixels ? On-chip Column A/D Conversion & NR |
? 23.5 x 15.6 mm CMOS sensor 'Exmor' ? RGB Color Filter Array ? Built-in fixed low-pass filter ? 13.05 million total pixels ? 12.25 million effective pixels ? On-chip Column A/D Conversion & NR |
| Processor | Dual Bionz | Bionz |
| Crop Factor | 1x | 1.5x |
| Image sizes (3:2) | ? 6048 x 4032 (24M 3:2) ? 4400 x 2936 (13M 3:2) ? 3024 x 2016 (6.1M 3:2) ? 3924 x 2656 (11M APSC) ? 2896 x 1928 (5.6M APSC) ? 1984 x 1320 (2.6M APSC) |
? 4288 x 2856 (L RAW) ? 4272 x 2848 (L) ? 3104 x 2064 (M) ? 2128 x 1424 (S) |
| Auto Focus | ? TTL CCD line sensors (9-points, center dual cross types + 10 assist sensors) | ? TTL CCD line sensors (11-points, 10 lines with center dual cross sensor) |
| Custom modes | Three | Three |
| Bracketing | ? Single or continuous bracketing ? 3 or 5 frames ? 0.3, 0.5 , 0.7 or 2.0 EV steps (2.0 EV steps for 3 exposures only) |
? Single or continuous bracketing ? 3 or 5 frames ? 0.3, 0.5 or 0.7 EV steps |
| Continuous | ? H: Approx 5fps max ? L: Approx 3fps max ? RAW: Up to 12 frames ? cRAW (compressed): Up to 25 frames ? RAW+JPEG: Up to 10 frames ? JPEG (XFINE): Up to 11 frames ? JPEG (STD/FINE): 285/105 |
? H: Approx 5fps max ? L: Approx 3fps max ? RAW: Up to 18 frames ? cRAW (compressed): Up to 25 frames ? RAW+JPEG: Up to 12 frames ? JPEG (XFINE): Up to 16 frames ? JPEG (STD/FINE): Unlimited (to card capacity) |
| Viewfinder | ? Optical glass pentaprism ? Spherical Acute Matte focusing screen (interchangeable) ? Frame coverage approx 100% ? Magnification approx. 0.74x ? Eye-relief 20 mm from eyepiece, 21 mm from frame ? Eyepiece shutter |
? Optical glass pentaprism ? Spherical Acute Matte focusing screen (interchangeable) ? Frame coverage approx 95% ? Magnification approx. 0.9x ? Eye-relief 25 mm from eyepiece, 21 mm from frame |
| Vertical Grip | Optional vertical Grip VG-C90AM | Optional vertical Grip VG-C70AM |
| Dimensions | 156 x 117 x 82 mm | 141.7 x 104.8 x 79.7 mm |
| Weight | ? No battery: 850 g ? With battery: 895 g |
? No battery: 690 g ? With battery: 768 g |
| Other | ? Intelligent Preview mode ? New raw converter software ? AF Micro Adjustment ? Top LCD panel |
? Grip sensor |
| Camera Digital Sony Alpha A900 24.6mp
Preço:
R$ 9.99999 unid. (Produto Novo)
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