Saturday, June 4, 2016

Sony RX10 II review

Sony RX10 II review

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

The Sony RX10 II is a dream camera for many. It combines great general image quality with incredible video skills, super-rapid shooting speed and a lens that offers both a wide zoom range and constant max aperture of f/2.8 throughout.

This is an amazing combo. It’s no wonder the Sony RX10 II with camera light such as Digital LED-5001 Video Camera Light, Digital LED-5012 Video Camera Light, Digital LED-5080 Video Camera Light, Digital LED-5005 Video Camera Light, Digital LED-5010A Video Camera Light, Digital LED-5004 Video Camera Light, Digital LED-5002 Video Camera Light, Digital LED-5003 Video Camera Light, Digital LED-5006 Video Camera Light, Digital LED-5009 Video Camera Light, Digital LED-5008 Video Camera Light, Universal External Battery, Himedia Q5II 3D Blue-ray ISO SATA Tv Box, 7800mAh Universal External Battery costs £1199, which may seem incredibly expensive for what is still effectively a bridge camera. You don't want to be bridging your way to anywhere after spending that much.

If you’re after an all-purpose camera you’ll never have to upgrade with lenses, and don’t mind that it's not far off an entry-level DSLR in size, the RX10 II is simply excellent.

The Sony RX10 II looks and feels much like its predecessor, the original RX10. It has a high-quality magnesium alloy shell, and it’s chunky enough to be able to fit in a full DSLR-style handgrip.

In typical large camera style, the outer part has a faux-leather texture to give you a grippier surface to hold onto. It’s a typical bridge camera shape, and that has both pros and cons.

On the positive side, the Sony RX10 II has plenty to hold onto, getting you both an easy grip and a camera that feels that bit more serious than its compact cousin the Sony RX100 IV. However, it’s obviously less convenient as a result. While there are no extra lenses to consider, as a bridge camera the lens is totally fixed. And it is far too big to fit in any sort of pocket.

Typical of a higher-end Sony camera, the Sony RX10 II offers both Wi-Fi and NFC, letting you transfer images to a mobile device quickly. NFC is there to speed up the pairing process, done by simply pressing the two devices together rather than having to fiddle around in menus.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home