The Fujifilm X-H2 mirrorless camera was a major step forward for the company's highly respected X Series, as it was the first body to add a high-resolution sensor, increasing its versatility and making it all the more desirable for photographers and filmmakers. How does it hold up in the long run? This great video review takes a look at the camera's performance and quality after a year of use.
Coming to you from The Hybrid Shooter, this excellent video review takes a look at the Fujifilm X-H2 mirrorless camera after a year of usage. The X-H2 comes with an impressive range of features, including:
- 40.2-megapixel back-illuminated X-Trans CMOS 5 HR sensor
- X-Processor 5
- Minimum ISO of 125
- Ultra-fast electronic shutter with speeds of up to 1/180,000 s
- 15 fps continuous bursts using mechanical shutter
- 20 fps continuous bursts using electronic shutter
- Pixel Shift Multi-Shot for high-resolution 160-megapixel images
- 5-axis in-body image stabilization
- Subject-detection autofocus with deep learning, including animals, birds, people, cars, bicycles, planes, trains, and motorcycles
- 8K 30p internal Apple ProRes video in 4:2:2 10-bit
- 12-bit 8K 30p raw video output with external recorder
- 4K video oversampled from 8K with up to 2x digital zoom without a loss of resolution
- F-Log2 for over 13 stops of dynamic range
- Up to 30 minutes of recording time
- 5.76-million-dot EVF with 0.8x magnification and 120 fps refresh rate
- 79 weather-sealed points
- Optional cooling fan and battery grip
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Bluetooth and Wi-Fi connectivity
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USB-C and HDMI micro Type D
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Dual card slots
All in all, the X-H2 looks like another fantastic camera from Fujifilm. Check out the video above for the full rundown.
1 Comment
Fujifilm seem to have adopted the tried and tested commercial formula of incremental model releases with a few tweaks to keep the cash registers ringing. Where is the ground breaking stuff that disrupts the market? The 1:1 sensor with 4x3, 3x2, 16x10 vertical and horizontal crops. The desktop application that allows deep level menu configurations to be uploaded to the camera with presets? Even a crop to 4x3 with preset focus points when existing cameras are rotated to portrait format? That would save sports shooters a bunch of time in post processing.