Is This the End of Digital Backs?

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Nov 16, 2023

Is This the End of Digital Backs?

Produced for more than 20 years, Swiss-made Alpa cameras are renowned for their

Produced for more than 20 years, Swiss-made Alpa cameras are renowned for their precision, construction quality and high price. They are designed to work with medium format digital backs and specifically mounted lenses from Rodenstock and Schneider. In the age of high-resolution mirrorless cameras, does such a solution make sense?

Some time ago, with Grzegorz and Juliusz, I tested a small, unusual camera called the Sigma fp L. It is a development of the Sigma fp, which was conceived as a combination of camcorder and camera, with an emphasis on the latter. Hence its simple body designed for modular expansion and the use of a film rig. The fp L version is equipped with a full-frame 60 megapixel sensor from Sony and has an L bayonet. The sensor is therefore positioned quite shallow (short flange focal distance) and the body itself is flat and has no protruding handle. What does this mean? It is great as a digital back!

A post shared by Jedrzej Sokolowski (@jedrzejsokolowski)

Some time ago, I posted a video on Instagram showing the operation of the Alpa 12 STC with a cottage industry prototype of the rear L mount. It turned out to be faster, easier and cheaper to shoot with a compact mirrorless than with a digital back. In bright sunlight, the digital viewfinder is very useful.

Perhaps this is why very recently, Analogous announced the production of the ALPA to L-Mount adapter? Coincidence?

Our custom ALPA to L-Mount adapter was designed and developed to allow new combinations of equipment and aid in new image capture possibilities… specifically in the area of architectural "moving images."

Architectural and interiors photographer, Christophe Bénard posted a very interesting short opinion on his instagram about technical cameras. His summary is worth reading!

Well, a tech camera is a versatile camera body that incorporates movement – tilt, shift, rise and fall – and fits in a category of its own between DSLRs and large format view cameras. They present a few advantages over tilt-shift lenses most notably when stitching panoramas or composing images (separate shift and rise/fall movements).

A post shared by Christophe Bénard (@benardphoto)

So I am calling all the main camera manufacturers out there (…) who will be the first one to dare offering the world's first modular mirrorless system that can be used as a regular camera, or mounted on a technical camera as a digital back? Or in other words @fujifilmx_us, please just give us a replacement to the GFX 50R with a bsi sensor and all the bells and whistles of your competitors while conserving the brilliant pancake design, or better, offer a new camera with a detachable hand grip?

Architectural photography with the use of shift lenses is a small niche, constituting only a small part of the commercial market. That's probably why none of the manufacturers of mirrorless cameras is aware (or doesn't consider it) that they products could be used as digital backs. It is obvious that for standard shooting, e.g. reportage or fashion, a protruding, comfortable handle grip is necessary. That is why Sony increases the size of this handle in its next models from the Alpha series. But from our perspective this eliminates Sony cameras from the list of connectable to technical cameras. The protruding element does not allow you to get close enough to the bayonet. That is why the Sigma fp L stands out from other cameras thanks to its modular design. It is similar with the Fuji GFX 50R, which, unlike, for example, the GFX100s, does not have a big handle grip.

I will briefly summarize the advantages:

I will list the main disadvantages of using a technical camera:

This is just a brief description of a wide and complex issue. Do you think this direction makes sense? Do you use such solutions and support Benard's appeal?