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Firmware Update

Nikon Zf camera Silver Edition Coming

Finally, the mystery is revealed—the camera is the Silver edition of the Nikon Zf camera. The exact announcement date of the camera is not known yet. Still, the camera will arrive before the Nikon ZR camera, which is rumored to be a video-centric cinema mirrorless camera, using the Nikon Z6 Mark III camera sensor and lots of RED technology inside it.

I’ve heard many people are waiting for the silver Zf model, so the arrival of the silver/chrome model is likely to be very welcome. I’m looking forward to the high-quality silver/chrome body. Note that the image in the original article is an AI-generated image, not a leaked image.

Follow us on our social pages  FACEBOOK | TWITTER | INSTAGRAM to get live  Camera NewsNikon Rumors 24X7.

source NR[nikonrumor]


Nikon ZR coming in Q4 of 2025

Nikon Z8 Firmware 3.0: Major Firmware Update

Nikon 3.0 Firmware detasils

Nikon issued a major firmware update to the Nikon Z8 Camera, firmware 3.0, a free update packed with powerful new features and performance enhancements for our compact pro model. Designed to help you get even more out of your Z8, this update brings major upgrades across photography, video, and workflow.

1. World First – Pixel Shift + Focus Shift Technology now in Nikon Z8

The Z8 is now the world’s first camera to combine pixel shift with focus shift or pixel shift with auto exposure bracketing into your workflow. This unlocks both greater depth of field and resolution, perfect for commercial, fine art, and architectural photography. Using Nikon’s NX Studio software, you can merge pixel shift clusters. Then stack focus layers using your preferred software to create images with clarity and resolution up to 180 megapixels. Pixel shift also reduces moray, improves color accuracy, and lowers noise, giving you cleaner, more detailed results. With pixel shift and AE bracketing, the Z8 creates a pixel shift cluster at every exposure bracket, which you can then merge for high resolution and enhanced dynamic range.

2. Enhanced Autofocus: Precision and Speed

Autofocus gets a boost, too. Expanded custom wide area AF options can now be set completely at the edge of the frame and with smaller increments for more precise design of your AF point. To help you nail focus, there’s now a onetouch 400% magnification option, plus a builtin focus limiter that lets you define near and far focus ranges, speeding up autofocus and helping the camera lock on more efficiently.

3. Creative Control: Flexible Color Picture Profiles

Firmware 3.0 puts your creative intent front and center with new compatibility with flexible color picture controls. Import NP3 files created in NX Studio. Load them onto your Z8 and shoot with your custom looks applied in real time, capturing your vision exactly as you see it. For filmmakers shooting in an log, a more accurate view assist now displays enhanced highlights and contrast that more closely resembles our new Rec 709 L.

4. Workflow Upgrades: Voice Memos and Networking

For photojournalists, you can now record voice memos using an external mic for clear audio annotations even on the move. This update also makes the Z8 fully compatible with Nikon’s powerful advanced networking solution, NX Field. With NX Field, you can trigger and control up to 10 remote cameras via LAN. Adjust nearly every setting remotely and send files directly to an FTP server. Ideal for sports, news, and event coverage.

5. Download Nikon Z8 Firmware 3.0 Now

These updates redefine what’s possible with the Z8, whether you’re in the studio or out in the field. Download firmware 3.0 soon on Nikon’s website or through the Snapbridge app and start exploring what’s new.

Click here to explore more about Nikon Z8 3.0


Get you Nikon Z8 From Here –  online B&H Store | Adorama | Amazon.com |

See more Nikon Z8 Comparison –  – Panasonic S1R II vs Nikon Z8  |  Nikon Z8 vs Leica SL3-S


Nikon added Shutter angle and Waveform Monitor in Nikon Z6 III and Nikon Z8

Olympus OM-5 Mark II Latest Rumors

According to the latest rumors from the rumor mill, the Olympus OM-5 Mark II announcement is expected on June 17, 2025. The camera will feature the same sensor as we have seen in the OM-1 Mark II camera, the 20 MP Stacked M4/3 format sensor. If the rumored information is true, then the entire OM-5 Series will surely experience a Major update in the sensor technology, aligning it closely with OM System’s flagship model.

A nice bump in speed and image quality compared to the original OM-5 if the rumored information is true. A few subtle tweaks to the body design is also coming alongside the new sensor, though nobody’s shown us clear details yet (we are waiting for the leaked images/specs to confirm this). If we talk about the EXACT set of information from the sources of the rumor mill, they have mentioned “stacked sensor” without saying exactly which one, so. What we have concluded is that if a stacked CMOS sensor is used, then for sure Oly will use the 20MP stacked from the flagship model.

The combination of “conventional 20MP sensor + TruePic X” seems possible. However, rather than using the old sensor (which has been in use since 2016), it may be cheaper for the company to standardize on the stacked sensor.

Either way, we’ll likely find out on June 17th,  Stay tuned more updates coming

Follow us for more updates and get LIVE RUMORS –> FACEBOOK | TWITTER |  INSTAGRAM to get live news — > get live camera news +  –> See More+ Olympus Rumors 24X7

Credit / courtesy of 43Rumors—

Sony FX2 vs Nikon Z6 III

Sony FX2 versus the Nikon Z6 Mark III camera, let’s explore the differences between the two point by point

The Nikon Z6 Mark III camera is slightly larger, with a photography-friendly body and controls. The Sony FX2 does have a deep hand grip, but it has a somewhat boxy design. The thing that makes a big difference between the two, specifically in the design part, is that Sony is made for cinematography purposes and carries a lot of tripod threads all over the body to mount it perfectly in cinema rigs. The other advantage we have with the Sony FX2 camera is the moving viewfinder.

Nikon Z6 III and the Sony FX2 — both of them support dual card slots, one dedicated for CFexpress and one SD card slot. The Nikon Z6 Mark III monitor is slightly larger and of higher resolution, so users may experience better LCD quality with the Z6 Mark III camera. At the very same time, the electronic viewfinder is also a 5.76 million-dot unit compared to a 3.6 million-dot electronic viewfinder in Sony, but yeah, we are getting better display units in the Nikon Z6 Mark III.

The wireless functionality of the two is almost the same, but Nikon does have GPS support via smartphone to enable geotagging functionality for travel purposes, documentary work, or maybe for photojournalism purposes. The FX Mark 2 camera misses out. Although the humidity tolerance and the weatherproof criteria of both cameras match each other, so we literally do have almost the same build quality in both cameras.

Design Comparison

Feature Sony FX2 Nikon Z6 III
Lens Mount Sony E Nikon Z
Material of Construction Magnesium Alloy Magnesium Alloy
Dimensions (W x H x D) 5.1 x 4.1 x 3.1″ / 129.7 x 103.7 x 77.8 mm 5.5 x 4 x 2.9″ / 138.5 x 101.5 x 74 mm
Weight 1.3 lb / 594 g (Body Only), 1.5 lb / 679 g (With Battery, Recording Media) 23.6 oz / 670 g (Body Only)
Shoe Mount 1x Intelligent Hot Shoe 1x Hot Shoe
Tripod Mounting Thread 2x 1/4″-20 Female (Bottom) 1x 1/4″-20 Female (Bottom)
Accessory Mounting Thread 3x 1/4″-20 on Camera Body Not specified
Operating Conditions 32 to 104°F / 0 to 40°C 32 to 104°F / 0 to 40°C up to 85% Humidity
Media/Memory Card Slot

Slot 1: CFexpress Type A / SD (UHS-II)

Slot 2: SD/SDHC/SDXC (UHS-II)

Slot 1: CFexpress Type B / XQD

Slot 2: SD/SDHC/SDXC (UHS-II)

Wireless 2.4 GHz Bluetooth 5.0, 2.4 / 5 GHz Wi-Fi (802.11a/b/g/n/ac) 2.4 / 5 GHz Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac), Bluetooth 5.0
Mobile App Compatible Yes: Android & iOS (Sony Creators’ App
Global Positioning No GPS (via Connected Smartphone)
Monitor 3″ Tilting Touchscreen LCD, 1,036,800 Dot 3.2″ Articulating Touchscreen LCD, 2,100,000 Dot
Viewfinder Electronic (OLED), 3,686,400 Dot / Titling EVF Electronic, 5,760,000 Dot, 0.5″

Best Camera for Photographers

Sony FX2 camera offers higher resolution at 33 megapixels, but at the very same time, the Nikon Z6 Mark 3 camera offers 24.5 megapixel resolution, which is of course limited. But if you talk about sensor architecture, then the Nikon Z6 Mark 3 camera is using a partially stacked CMOS sensor.

Video Recording: Nikon Z6 III Excels

Of course, the Sony FX2 camera is able to create highly detailed 4K 30fps footage from a 7K oversampled file. At the very same time, when you are recording videos at 4K 60 frames per second or 4K 120 frames per second with the Nikon Z6 Mark 3 camera—and of course, to be noted—4K 120 FPS is not possible with the Sony FX2 despite being in a higher price range. Other than that, even when you are trying to record 4K @ 60 frames per second, at that time you have to face a 1.5x crop in the Sony FX2. So with the FX2, we have limitations attached in the higher frame rate, and 4K 120 is not possible.

Continuous Shooting Speed Comparison

The same advantage we also get in the continuous shooting speed of the camera, where we are able to get up to 20 FPS RAW, and up to 60 frames per second in full resolution, and up to 120 frames per second in the DX crop mode. Thankfully, the Sony FX2 camera is using a mechanical shutter, but despite that, the continuous shooting speed of the camera remains limited to 11 frames per second.

Autofocus: Sony FX2’s Precision

When you dive into autofocus performance, each system really brings something different to the table. Sony’s FX2 boasts a whopping 759 phase-detection points (compared with Nikon’s 299 “hybrid” points), which means it can lock onto—and keep track of—moving subjects across with Sony’s famous AI AF. That’s a huge advantage when you’re shooting fast-paced street scenes or busy event coverage.

Nikon Z6 III’s Low-Light Autofocus

On the other hand, Nikon’s autofocus shines in low-light situations. With a sensitivity down to –10 EV (versus Sony’s 4 EV), the Z6 III can find and focus on subjects in near-darkness—perfect for late-night cityscapes, dimly lit weddings, or cozy indoor gatherings.

Autofocus Tracking: Nikon Closing the Gap

Recent reviews peg the Z6 III’s subject recognition and tracking as nearly on par with Sony’s vaunted system, so you’re not really “giving up” much by choosing Nikon—especially if you need that extra push in challenging light. Still, many pros continue to call Sony the gold standard for sheer reliability, so it really comes down to what kind of shooting you do most often.

Image Stabilization: Nikon’s Edge

Sensor-shift image stabilization of the Nikon Z6 Mark 3 is more helpful, since you can link your autofocus point with the VR system of the camera, and you will be getting a true 7.5 stops of stabilization all the time, even if you are focusing in the corner of the frame. Sony’s Active Image Stabilization is highly effective in video mode, but when you are talking about stills, it’s the traditional-style IBIS system we are getting.

Why Choose Nikon Z6 III for Pros

Nikon Z6 Mark III camera, due to its partially stacked CMOS sensor and Expeed 7 image processor, the autofocus calculation is being done at the rate of 120 frames per second in-camera. So the autofocus and the auto exposure refresh rate is actually 120 FPS. And due to the introduction of a new artificially intelligent autofocus algorithm inside the camera, the overall photographic experience is now elevated to the next level.

So if you are a professional photographer, then the Nikon Z6 Mark 3 will be a perfect choice for your requirements.

Photographic Features Compared

Feature Sony FX2 Nikon Z6 III
Sensor Resolution Actual: 34.1 MP, Effective: 33 MP Actual: 26.79 MP, Effective: 24.5 MP (6048 x 4032)
Image Sensor 35.9 x 23.9 mm (Full-Frame) CMOS 35.9 x 23.9 mm (Full-Frame) Partially Stacked CMOS
Image Stabilization Sensor-Shift, 5-Axis, Active IS Sensor-Shift, 5-Axis, AF points can be linked to VR
ISO Sensitivity Native 100-51,200 (50-204,800 Extended) Photo: Native 100-64,000 (50-204,800 Extended)
Shutter Type Mechanical Focal Plane and Electronic Rolling Shutter Mechanical Focal Plane and Electronic Rolling Shutter
Shutter Speed 1/8000 to 30 Seconds (Photo) 1/8000 to 15 Minutes (Mechanical), 1/16000 to 15 Minutes (Electronic)
Continuous Shooting Not specified in the provided data (10 fps per web sources) Up to 20 fps at Maximum Resolution
Autofocus Points Photo: Phase Detection: 759 Photo, Video: Contrast Detection, Phase Detection: 299
Autofocus Sensitivity 4 to +20 EV -10 to +18 EV
White Balance 2500 to 9900K 2500 to 10,000K, Presets: Auto, Cloudy, Color Temperature, Direct Sunlight, Flash, Fluorescent, Incandescent, Shade
Image File Format Not specified (JPEG, Raw per web sources) HEIF, JPEG, Raw
Bit Depth Not specified (14-bit per web sources) 14-Bit

Best Camera for Video

When it comes to video, the Z6 III feels like a powerhouse that’s ready to stretch your creativity. Imagine being able to capture in gorgeous ProRes RAW—right inside the camera—at up to 6K/60p. With the help of the stacked CMOS sensor, the camera can record 6K 60fps videos. Despite being a consumer hybrid mirrorless camera, the Nikon Z6 Mark III is able to deliver 6K resolution, that is really a big surprise.
That means you’ve got room to push and pull your colors, tweak contrast, and hold onto every bit of shadow and highlight detail without worrying about external recorders or cables.

Nikon Z6 Mark III Slow-Motion Capabilities

And if you need silky-smooth slow-mo or a little extra resolution, you can jump into uncropped 4K/120p or even 1080p/240p modes. While shooting 4K 120 frames per second, you have to face a 1.5x DX crop, and when you are shooting 4K @ 60 frames per second, there is a negligible amount of crop, which remains unnoticeable.

Sony FX2 Video Features

Sony’s FX2 isn’t slouching, though. It delivers clean, 10-bit H.264/H.265 internally and will give you oversampled 4K/30p for sharp, detailed footage. If you really need that ProRes RAW goodness, you can use an external recorder via HDMI—but that means more gear hanging off your rig. And when you want to push the frame rate higher in 4K—meaning if you want to record your 4K videos at 60 frames per second—you have to face a 1.5x crop, and there is no 120 frames per second option available in the Sony FX2 while recording 4K videos.

Sony FX2 Live-Streaming Advantages

Where Sony shines is in its live-streaming chops: built-in RTMP/RTMPS and SRT support make it a dream camera for one-person streaming setups, whereas the Z6 III leaves you hunting for a separate encoder. Both cameras give you flexible picture profiles—N-Log on Nikon holds up beautifully alongside Sony’s S-Log 3 and S-Cinetone—but in professional circles, S-Log and Cinetone have built a bit more of a buzz.

Audio and Rolling Shutter Comparison

Don’t forget audio: both record in 24-bit LPCM, but Sony’s extra channels give you more mics or ambient tracks to play with. And if rolling shutter is a worry, Nikon’s stacked sensor really pulls ahead—its readout is faster, so you’ll see far less “jello” when you whip the camera side-to-side at 4K/60p or 120p.

Nikon Z6 III vs. Sony FX2: Which to Choose?

In short, if you’re a solo shooter who loves to color-grade, chase cinematic slow-mo, and keep your rig light, the Z6 III’s internal RAW and high-speed modes deliver. If you’re streaming live, mixing multiple audio sources, or don’t mind an external recorder for 16-bit RAW, the FX2’s built-in streaming and flexible codecs have you covered.

Video Comparison

Feature Sony FX2 Nikon Z6 III
RAW 16 BIT via HDMI 12 Bit internally
MAX RES. 4K 60p 6K 60p N-RAW, 6K 30p ProRes RAW
Internal Recording Modes

H.264/H.265 8/10-Bit:

UHD 4K (3840 x 2160) at 23.98/25/29.97/50/59.94 fps

DCI 4K (4096 x 2160) at 23.98/24/25/29.97/50/59.94 fps

 

ProRes RAW/ProRes RAW HQ/Raw: 6048 x 3404 at 23.98/25/29.97/50/59.94 fps

4032 x 2268 at 23.98/25/29.97/50/59.94 fps 3984 x 2240 at 23.98/25/29.97/50/59.94/100/120 fps

UHD 4K (3840 x 2160) at 23.98/25/29.97/50/59.94/100/120 fps

 

Format and codes 16 Bit RAW, 10-Bit 4:2:2 XAVC S-I 12 Bit RAW,
4k 60 FPS Yes, 1.5X Crop Yes, No crop at 4k 60FPS
4K 120 FPS No Yes, 1.5X Crop
External Recording Modes

4:2:2 8/10-Bit via HDMI:

DCI 4K (4096 x 2160)

UHD 4K (3840 x 2160)

HD (1920 x 1080)

Raw 16-Bit: 4672 x 2628

HDMI: UHD 4K (3840 x 2160)
Dual Native ISO
Dual Base 800/4000 Dual Native ISO 800
Built-in Fan Yes No
Video IS Very effective / Active IS + Gyro  Mechanical IBIS + EVR
Fast-/Slow-Motion Support Yes Slow-Motion Only
Gamma Curve HDR-HLG, Rec709, S Cinetone, Sony S-Log 3, Standard HDR-HLG, Nikon N-Log
Anomorphic Lenses support Yes No
Audio Recording

2/4-Channel 24-Bit 48 kHz LPCM

2-Channel 16-Bit 48 kHz LPCM

16-Bit 48 kHz AAC Audio

2-Channel 24-Bit 48 kHz LPCM Audio

IP Streaming RTMP, RTMPS, SRT: 1280 x 720 to 3840 x 2160 at 25p, 29.97p, 50p, 59.94p No

Buy Nikon Z6 Mark III from Amazon.com | B&H Camera store

Buy Sony FX2 From B&H Store

also see

Which one is the Best Camera for Recording Video – Panasonic Lumix S1 II vs. Nikon Z6 III?

Best Lenses for Nikon Z6 III

Viltrox Teleconverter for Nikon Z-Mount Patent Spotted

In a recent patent spotted by Rumor Mill, the Viltrox is working on a 2x teleconverter for the Nikon Z Mount camera. It is very clearly visible from their patent images the lens mount has been designed for the Z Mount. Although the E-mount does not allow third-party teleconverters, the fact that Viltrox is preparing a Z-mount teleconverter suggests that Nikon may be considering allowing third-party teleconverters.

The pins’ location and numbers exactly match with Z Mount. For the first time that a third-party manufacturer is also free to create teleconverters, which was not possible earlier. So it will help the photographers to buy it at an affordable cost. This step may also indicate one thing very clearly, that Viltrox is also planning to bring Telephoto lenses Z mount soon.

Also see
Nikon ZR coming in Q4 of 2025
Nikon Z7 Mark III Leaked Specifications: Is the Rumored Camera Real?
Nikon Z9 Mark II, Coming before 2026 Winter Olympics?
Sony FX2 Coming Soon
Follow us on our social pages  FACEBOOK | TWITTER | INSTAGRAM to get live  Camera NewsNikon Rumors 24X7

source – Nikonrumor.com

Sony FX30 vs. Canon C400 - Canon Fails in Low-Light Test?

Lowlight tests done by Jake Hayden. He recently purchased a Canon C400 cinema camera; earlier, he was using a Sony FX30 camera for studio and professional work. But now he is regretting his decision since the C400 generates more noise compared to the FX30 in the same situation. Take a look at the sample below

Take a look at what Jake said –

What’s really interesting is I have access to an FX30. Now we’re always making fun of Sony for having a lot of internal noise reduction but look at this difference first of all I’m going to go to the extreme. This is six stops underexposed. The FX30 is recording XF-AVC 10bit 422 in 4k and look at that noise pattern you can tell there’s a little bit of noise reduction but it is so fine, I just wanted to compare that to the same mode on the C400 which looks so bad, the C400 broke at three stops under here’s the FX30 not in raw it’s an XF-AVC, looks like it’s fine granular noise. I am blown away at how bad the noise performance is on the C400 if you want a spiky takeaway from this you could buy five FX30s for the price of one C400 and all five of them would have better image quality but here’s the thing does any of this actually matter

Summary Table

The table below encapsulates the reviewer’s observations on noise performance and image quality, using corrected terms for accuracy.

Camera Codec Underexposure Tested Noise Performance Image Quality Observations
Sony FX30 XF-AVC 10-bit 4:2:2 6 stops, 3 stops Fine, granular noise with some noise reduction Less digital noise, usable at 3 stops under despite compression
Canon C400 XF-AVC, Raw 6 stops, 3 stops Digital, crunchy noise pattern Poorer noise performance, especially in raw, breaks at 3 stops under, less usable
Blackmagic Ursa Raw Reference (3-4 stops) Fine, pixel-level noise ~8 stops latitude with headroom to 9, better highlight and shadow recovery

I got an email today from one of our subscribers pointing towards this video, and this is quite seems to be a legit testing, and most importantly of all, he has put his hard-earned money into getting the camera, so it’s a fair review, not a sponsored one.

Get Sony FX30 from Amazon.com | B&H Store

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Nikon ZR coming in Q4 of 2025

According to the latest rumours we have from Rumor Mills, Nikon ZR — and here ZR stands for RED — Nikon RED series consumer grade cinema camera with Z Series based body design, coming in Q4 of 2025. Now, explore the key features of the Nikon ZR camera:

Nikon ZR Specification

  • 24.5MP Partially-Stacked CMOS Sensor: Nikon ZR will use the Nikon Z6 Mark III sensor.

  • A large display screen: The ZR will have a large display screen, making it comfortable for professional video workflow.

  • Enhanced RED technology inside which means we will have RED decode RAW and advanced colour science. Obviously, more details will be revealed with time.

While looking at the initial set of specs, it doesn’t look like a Nikon Z6 Mark III rebranded edition. From the initial specs, it looks like Nikon is working hard to produce a very unique line of consumer-grade cinema cameras in collaboration with RED.

We will bring more updates as soon as we get any latest information related to the upcoming Nikon ZR camera. Don’t get confused with the Nikon ZFR, which is said to be an extension of the existing Nikon Z lineup with a high-resolution sensor. Also, take a look at the list of Nikon’s upcoming cameras for 2025.

The article “Nikon ZR coming in Q4 of 2025”  written and updated by thenewcamera.com team on 4:01 pm, Friday, 16 May 2025, Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) | Follow us for more updates and Get LIVE RUMORS –> FACEBOOK | TWITTER |  INSTAGRAM to get live news — > get live news +  Nikon Rumors 24X7

source Nikonrumor.com


Nikon Upcoming Cameras 2025

Nikon Upcoming Camera