F Family

New F55 and F5

The pace of camera design, re-design, and release quickens. Lighter, smaller, faster, sooner. More K, more speed, better ergonomics, promising pictures.

Today, Sony reveals their new F55 and F5 cameras. Expect to see prototypes shooting on locations near you. Working cameras ship in January 2013. Some have called the F55 a companion to the F65, and the F5 an upgrade beyond F3. Many will call them Sony’s first comfortably shoulder-resting, modular, compact 4K cameras.

F5=black ring, F55=silver ring

The F55 and F5 are thin—not much wider than a prime lens. The cameras are modular and highly configurable. They look similar on the outside, with one distinctive difference. The FZ mount on the F55 is silver and on the F5 it’s black. (PL lenses attach with a PL to FZ mount adapter. More on mounts later.)

The big differences are inside

The F55 is the more expensive, feature-rich sibling. Since there’s a hurricane outside, please bear with us in case some of the specs that follow are off. The comparison of features makes the head spin. But, in the spirit of a two sentence pitch, here is the difference:

Get the F55 if you want to record 4K, 2K or HD internally to SxS Cards, shoot to 240 fps, have a global shutter, and want an F65 type of sensor design.

Get the F5 if you want to save money, record 2K or HD internally to SxS Cards (but not 4K internally), shoot to 180 fps, skip the global shutter, and want an F3 type of sensor design.

Common to both cameras

Both the F55 and F5 record 4K (and 2K) RAW onto a modular onboard AXS-R5 recorder that uses a new AXS Memory Card.

Both cameras have a Super 35mm 4,096 x 2,160 single CMOS sensor (11.6M total photosites, 8.9M effective). I think it’s Super 35mm 3-perf format size, 24 x 12.7 mm, 27.1 mm diagonal.

The F55 imager has a Bayer Pattern similar to the F65 and a “global shutter.” F5 has a Bayer Pattern similar to the F3. It does not have a global shutter.

The cameras weigh about 4 lb 14 oz (body only), and measure 7 1/8 x 7 7/8 x 12 ¼ inches. They consume 12 V DC (11 V – 17 V) at about 25 W.

F55 is rated at ISO 1250. F5 is rated at 2000 ISO. Certainly, you can adjust ISO up or down from there. Exposure latitude is 14 stops.

There are 3 behind-the-lens optical filters: clear, ND 0.9 (3 stops) and 1.8 (6 stops). Electronic shutter angle is variable from 4.2 – 360 degrees. Shutter speeds adjust from 1/24 – 1/6000 second. White balance choices are 3200, 4300, 5500K, Memorized, and ATW (Auto). There are 6 standard Gamma Curves and S-Log2 Gamma. I’m sure Philippe Ros and the crew at HDSystems are already busy building new ones.

Background

Sony’s F3 was unveiled at NAB 2010 by Alec Shapiro, and then quickly put under glass. The camera remained under glass at IBC. There was a lot of speculation about two signs that said, “Affordable 35mm Camera” and “It’s a 35mm World.”

Sony engineers discussed goals of “establishing a 35mm line-up to cover applications from high budget to lower budget production.” It was described as a democratization of the format.

Two months after IBC 2010, Alec officially introduced the PMW-F3 on the lofty 35th floor of Sony’s Madison Avenue headquarters in New York. “Affordable” was an understatement. The camera was priced around $16,000.

One of the biggest attractions of the F3 was its very shallow flange focal depth (18 mm). That meant you could mount almost any lens on the planet using simple adapters . Every PMW-F3 camera shipped with a Sony F3 to PL mount adaptor, and companies like MTF, Denz, 16×9 Inc, and others.

Like the IBC sign said, it was a 35mm world, not just a PL mount camera world.

But there was one thing about the F3 that had many of us whining. The eyepiece was stuck at the rear, and you couldn’t rest the camera on your shoulder.

I’m sure the lights have been burning late in Atsugi, Sony’s professional design facility. The F55 and F5 are said to have been in the planning stages for 2 years. Which means that Sony engineers were interviewing DPS, ACs, DITs, Colorists, Editors, Post and Rental House Personnel immediately after the F3 launched. No wonder there’s a well-attended Starbucks on the ground floor in Atsugi.

F55 and F5 Recording

F55 records internal 4K (not RAW) to SxS cards, along with varieties of HD and 2K. Cinema 4K (4096 x 2160) and Consumer 4K TV QFHD (Quad HD 3840 x 2160) are both supported on SxS cards. F55 will record 4K and QFHD up to 60 fps. HD and 2K up to 180 fps. And 2K RAW up to 240 fps. (Only the Sony F65 records 4K RAW up to 120 fps.)

F5 records HD and 2K internally onto SxS cards. It cannot record internal 4K. F5 does HD, 2K and 2K RAW to 120 fps, and HD to 180 fps.

And, of course, both the F55 and F5 record 4K (and 2K) RAW onto the new AXS Memory Card in the modular onboard AXS-R5 recorder.

The cameras give you the choice of recording in 4K, 2K or HD. Sony also seems to have headed off any “Why didn’t you” comments with a head-spinning alphabet soup of choices, codecs and compressions. See their website for the full list.

4K, 2K, or HD

With 8.9 megapixels (effective), Sony’s new image sensor lets you shoot in 4K, 2K, or HD. Here are some scenarios:

Shoot, Record, Master and Distribute in 4K. Why 4K? There are more than 13,000 theaters with Sony Digital Cinema 4K projectors, and a lot more screens with 4K projectors from the other major brands. Sony’s new 84” 4K TV is on display in Sony stores. The new LG 84” 4K TV went on sale a couple of days ago. JVC showed 4K home projectors recently. At PhotoPlus this past weekend, and Photokina last month, we saw 4K computer monitors from EIZO, Fujifilm, Canon, and 4K production monitors from Sony and Dolby. Sony is introducing a new 30″ PVM-X300 LCD 4K field monitor.

Why 4K? There are more than 13,000 theaters with Sony Digital Cinema 4K projectors, and a lot more screens with 4K projectors from the other major brands. Sony’s new 84” 4K TV is on display in Sony stores. The new LG 84” 4K TV went on sale a couple of days ago. JVC showed 4K home projectors recently. At PhotoPlus this past weekend, and Photokina last month, we saw 4K computer monitors from EIZO, Fujifilm, Canon, and 4K production monitors from Sony and Dolby. Sony is introducing a new 30″ PVM-X300 LCD 4K field monitor. Shoot, Record and Master in 4K. Distribute in HD or 2K. Future-proof your original as a 4K archival master for future 4K release. Meanwhile, edit, post, and distribute in HD or 2K.

Future-proof your original as a 4K archival master for future 4K release. Meanwhile, edit, post, and distribute in HD or 2K. Shoot in 4K. Record, Master and Distribute in 2K/HD. And so on.

AXS-R5 4K/2K RAW recorder

For RAW recording, Sony’s optional, modular AXS-R5 recorder snaps on behind the camera body.

4K or 2K RAW. Record RAW in native 4K or “derived” 2K. RAW recording is like having a digital negative with greater possibilities for color and contrast correction.

Record RAW in native 4K or “derived” 2K. RAW recording is like having a digital negative with greater possibilities for color and contrast correction. The cameras record 16-bit. The F55 uses the same color filter array and bit depth technology used in the 16-bit linear recording F65 camera. 16-bit (2 16 ) color depth is 65,536 shades each of Red, Green, and Blue. That’s 16 times as many Red, Green and Blue gradations as 12-bit RAW and 64 times more than 10-bit recording. F55/F5 is compatible with the Academy Color Encoding System (ACES) specifications. Compression of 16-bit 4K and 2K RAW is about 1/3.6.

The F55 uses the same color filter array and bit depth technology used in the 16-bit linear recording F65 camera. 16-bit (2 ) color depth is 65,536 shades each of Red, Green, and Blue. That’s 16 times as many Red, Green and Blue gradations as 12-bit RAW and 64 times more than 10-bit recording. F55/F5 is compatible with the Academy Color Encoding System (ACES) specifications. Compression of 16-bit 4K and 2K RAW is about 1/3.6. AXSM Memory Cards. The onboard AXS-R5 records onto internal AXSM memory cards at various data rates (e.g. 1.0 Gbps for 4K RAW at 24 fps, 2.4 Gbps at 60 fps.) The cards are the same width as F65 SRMemory Cards (60 x 105 x 9.4 mm), but shorter (60 x 81 x 9.4 mm.) They will initially come in 256 GB and 512 GB capacities.

The onboard AXS-R5 records onto internal AXSM memory cards at various data rates (e.g. 1.0 Gbps for 4K RAW at 24 fps, 2.4 Gbps at 60 fps.) The cards are the same width as F65 SRMemory Cards (60 x 105 x 9.4 mm), but shorter (60 x 81 x 9.4 mm.) They will initially come in 256 GB and 512 GB capacities. exFAT. The Memory Cards are formatted in exFAT, which works on Mac or PC.

AXS-CR1 Card Reader

AXSM Memory Cards can be read by the AXS-CR1, an affordable USB 3.0 reader with 2 Gbps transfer speeds to the computer. 4K RAW transfers at 2x real time, so 60 minutes of material offloads in 30 minutes. This is faster than an SRMemory Card.

Raw Viewer

RAW files can be viewed on your laptop or desktop using Sony’s free RAW Viewer software.

Simultaneous RAW + Onboard SxS recording

You can simultaneously record RAW files to the AXS-R5 RAW recorder and immediately-editable (“offline”) files to internal SxS cards. Time code, start frame, stop frame, file names and other metadata will match on both the AXSM and the SxS cards. The camera supports the following RAW + Onboard combinations:

4K/2K RAW + XAVC 2K*/HD (* Expected as a future upgrade.)

4K/2K RAW + MPEG-2 HD422

2K RAW + XAVC QFHD*/4K (on F55, not on F5)

Electronic global shutter

The F55 sensor has an electronic global shutter. Rolling shutter “jello effects” (distortion causing vertical lines to tilt) are eliminated. The F5 does not have a global shutter.

Viewfinders

The F55 has a choice of 3 viewfinders.

OLED: DVF-EL100. This 0.7-inch (diagonal) 1280 x 720 viewfinder offers high definition, and improved brightness, contrast and response.

This 0.7-inch (diagonal) 1280 x 720 viewfinder offers high definition, and improved brightness, contrast and response. LCD: DVF-L350. This 3.5-inch (diagonal) 960 x 540 LCD viewfinder has higher resolution and 10 times the contrast of previous LCD models. The eyepiece flips up to reveal the 3.5-inch LCD screen.

Monitor

LCD monitor: DVF-L700. This compact 7-inch (diagonal) 1920 x 1080 LCD on-board monitor works with the camera’s 2K and 4K output modes, and provides pixel-for-pixel 1920 x 1080 viewing in HD.

Shoulder Rig

An optional Sony shoulder mount and pad attaches to the camera’s base. The one above is a 3ality Technica rig for the F3–but Sony will be supplying their own. (Not yet sure if it’s made in-house or by one of the usual suspects.) It will be lightweight and have industry-standard rosettes (hurray!) on both sides for quick and easy attachment of third-party handgrips and accessories.

Modular

The F55 and F5 cameras are small, light and modular. The AXS-R5 RAW recorder snaps on between the body and on-board battery. The time code/genlock connections and XLR audio inputs come in two detachable modules. The camera body is only slightly wider than a typical PL mount prime lens.

Threads in Base, Top and Handle

There are 3/8-16 and ¼-20 threads on the bottom and handle, and ¼-20 threads on the top of the camera.

Choice of recording formats onto internal SxS Cards

The F5 has 3 recording formats and the F55 has four recording formats for internal SxS media. Here’s a list of format, color, bit-depth, bit rate at 30 fps, and description:

MPEG-2 HD. 4:2:2. 8-bit. 50 Mbps. Well-accepted standard for television production.

XAVC HD (2K expected as a future upgrade). 4:2:2. 10-bit. 100 Mbps. This next generation of H.264/AVC Intra-frame coding proposes a cost-efficient system for High Frame Rate HD and 4K/60p production.

SR Codec (future upgrade). 4:2:2, 4:4:4. 10-bit. 220, 440, 880 Mbps. The SR Codec (MPEG4 SStP) is widely used in production and post. Once the upgrade is ready, the F55 and F5 will record files in the same codec used on SR tape.

XAVC 4K (QFHD with future upgrade) on F55, not F5. 4:2:2. 10-bit. 300 Mbps. If your view of 4K is that it can be a data challenge with large files and lots of storage, Sony proposes this version of H.264/AVC Intra-frame encoding with reasonably compact files.

Variable frame rates

F55: High speed up to 240 fps in 2K

60 fps out of the box (XAVC HD at launch; XAVC 4K, QFHD and 2K with a planned upgrade)

out of the box (XAVC HD at launch; XAVC 4K, QFHD and 2K with a planned upgrade) 180 fps with a planned upgrade (XAVC 2K/HD). There is no line skipping or sensor windowing. Therefore, there’s no crop factor, which magnifies the angle of view into a more telephoto effect.

with a planned upgrade (XAVC 2K/HD). There is no line skipping or sensor windowing. Therefore, there’s no crop factor, which magnifies the angle of view into a more telephoto effect. 240 fps 2K 16-bit RAW, with the AXS-R5 recorder and a planned upgrade.

F5: High speed up to 120 fps in 2K

60 fps out of the box (XAVC HD).

out of the box (XAVC HD). 120 fps with a planned upgrade (XAVC 2K/HD).

with a planned upgrade (XAVC 2K/HD). 120 fps 2K RAW, with the AXS-R5 recorder and a planned upgrade.

High-speed SxS PRO+ media cards

The F55 and F5 cameras are capable of high-data-rate on-board recording. This requires next-generation SxS recording media—Sony’s 64 and 128 GB SxS PRO+ memory cards—and a next-generation SxS USB card reader, the SBAC-US20.

FZ Lens Lens Mount

Like the F3, The F5 and F55 have an FZ mount. The flange focal depth is 18 mm, like Sony’s E-Mount. Physically, Sony’s FZ mount has a much large diameter than the E-mount.

18-252 mm Zoom

One of the first dedicated lenses for the FZ mount was Sony’s ENG-style 18-252 mm T3.8-6.8 SCL-Z18X140 FZ-mount auto-focus, auto-iris, image-stabilized servo zoom. The short flange focal distance is one of the things that helps shrink its variable overall length: 6.8″-8.6″ long.

PL to FZ Mount Adapter

Sony’s PL to FZ mount adapter lets you use almost all PL mounts on the planet. Electric contacts probably will pass through /i and LDS data. (PL mounts are 54 mm internal diameter, with a 52 mm focus depth.)

Other FZ Adapters

After-market adapters will let you attach Canon EF, Canon FD, Nikon F (DX), Leica R, Leica M, and many other lenses to the F5, F55 or F3. Here’s a list of mounts and flange focal depths in mm:

Sony FZ FZ (F55, F5, F3) mount 18 mm

Sony E-mount 18 mm

Leica M mount 27.8 mm

Canon Manual FD mount 42 mm

Canon EOS EF mount 44 mm

Nikon F-mount 46.5 mm

Leica R-mount 47 mm

PL mount 52 mm

Sony PL Primes

Sony introduces a second generation of inexpensive PL mount prime lenses, with improved mechanical design. Focal lengths are 20, 25, 35, 50, 85 and 135 mm, all T2.0. All have the same widest diameter of 118 mm, the same front diameter (114 mm), and geared barrel locations. All are 120 mm long, except the 135 mm, which is 145 mm long. They each have a 9-bladed iris, The focus ring rotates 240°.

Control Panel and Menus

The new menu and control interface is refreshingly intuitive (hurray). Gone is the dreaded Sony menu diving. The F55 and F5 have direct, one-touch buttons for frame rate, shutter speed, color temperature, ISO and gamma. Soft keys above and below the display are context sensitive for direct access to key parameters. Assignable buttons give you direct access to favorite adjustments.

4K output and other connections

The F55 camera has 4K output, up to 60p, via four 3G-SDI BNC connectors for real-time viewing on a compatible monitor. The HDMI connector provides HD, 2K and 4K output.

The F5 has four HD-SDI outputs (not 4K) and the HDMI is for HD and 2K only.

Both cameras have connectors for USB, DC-in, a removable XLR audio module and a removable timecode/genlock module. The XLR inputs take balanced analog audio, provide 48-Volt phantom power and will accept four channels of AES/EBU digital audio with an expected firmware upgrade.

Olivine Battery

The F55 takes advantage of Sony’s BP-FL75 battery pack, which uses Olivine—Lithium Iron Phosphate—instead of conventional Lithium Ion cathodes. The result is a substantial increase in charge-discharge cycles compared to previous Sony batteries.

The Olivine battery works with Sony’s BC-L90 quick charger. The camera is also compatible with Sony’s V-Mount BP-GL95A, GL65A, L80S and L60S batteries, which use the BC-L70 and L160 chargers.

www.sony.com/35mm

Sony F55 and F5 Image Gallery











