2016-07-06



Firstly, Selamat Hari Raya to my local readers! Secondly, and perhaps of more importance to the global audience, about 36 hours ago, the X1D arrived – plus both lenses and the system bag. I’m currently in the middle of a masterclass in Singapore and have had about four hours in total to shoot with it. Regular readers will know that normally, I wouldn’t post anything this early on in my usage of the camera for several reasons – firstly, firmware is not final, so not all functionality has been implemented and there are a lot of thing which will be improved before retail release. A large part of my responsibilities also include debugging and finding as many of those glitches as possible. Secondly, you really need to use it under a wide range of conditions to make a useful and comprehensive assessment of its capabilities. However, my inbox has been overflowing from the number of questions and requests for information, plus there’s been so much speculation over image quality, it’s more efficient for me to address this here. I also have clearance from Hasselblad to post full size images, linked in the article – I think they are also the first full size samples available anywhere. They are of sufficient technical standard but I’ll be the first to admit, it’s early days and I’ve not had as much time to shoot with it as usual – so the subject matter is somewhat limited. I have attempted to assess several things with these tests, though – quality of bokeh, edge sharpness, flare resistance, dynamic range, lateral CA etc. You may print or download them for your own use, but not commercial redistribution. For early impressions, read on. For full size files, click the images. I will attempt to answer questions left in comments HOWEVER please note that I am on the road for the next couple of days, so internet access will be limited. (Update: links to full size fixed)



Yes, it’s a small camera. But bigger than you might think, and a lot more solid-feeling. You can see that the frontal cross-section is similar to a H5 or H6, but the depth corresponds to something that’s lost the mirror box, larger card slots, prism and grip top LCD. The comparison on the far right is a worst case scenario: 45mm vs 35-90mm is not really fair, and the strap adds visual weight. The system bag is similar to a Billingham Hadley Digital, but a bit deeper, and it has a red tab and subtle embossed H logos on the sides, plus a shoulder pad. I apologize for the standard of the product images as I don’t exactly have my studio in the hotel room.

Most of the traffic, uncertainty and questions online have been around a few things, and I’ll address them now:

The EVF. It’s good enough – no, not as good as the Leica SL, but I honestly don’t see that much of a difference between this and my Leica Q in terms of detail, either. Refresh rate is a little bit lower, but comparable to the M4/3 cameras in the normal speed setting, significantly faster than the H6’s live view, and another planet from the H5’s live view. It needs contrast and brightness adjustment, but that’s coming in future firmware.

Sensor image quality: at least identical to, if not slightly better than, the H5/6 – I think it’s because of accuracy of focus more than anything. High ISOs are perhaps half a stop cleaner, and there’s now both auto ISO, 12k and 25k settings. I have requested the ability to adjust the auto-parameters. Color, dynamic range, and tonal response are identical to the H5/6 – which in my opinion, is the best you can get, period. Think 14-15 stops and almost zero profiling required, with a very natural highlight rolloff. See for yourself, in any case.

Lens quality: nothing to worry about here. I think they may actually be slightly better than the H lenses. Both of mine are prototypes – lenses and cameras – but I’m finding the 45mm to be better than the MTF charts suggest, and the 90mm slightly worse (though remember that the 90mm suggests Otus-grade performance). There is very little CA or any kind, and given the architecture relies on Phocus on your PC to do the correction, I’m impressed – since I’m using ACR to convert, and there are no Adobe profiles yet.

Autofocus: is faster than expected, but not Q-fast. It’s closer to GR-fast. You can’t move the point yet, but that’s coming also.

Use in low light: AF doesn’t slow down that much, but can experience either hunting, failure to lock or false positives. I’ve found this is due to the same limitation as most CDAF cameras: if there are point sources in the frame that overexpose, they will form a 100/0 contrast zone that the camera cannot lock on to – by definition, highest contrast will be greatest defocus + brightness. Pick targets sensibly and it’s fine.

Speed in operation: does not suggest there are files that big flying around (right now, there’s no compression and we’re looking at the 110MB/file range – 16 bit).

UI and touch screen: you don’t actually need to use it very much; the camera is simple enough that the hard buttons do everything you need. But it’s the same UI as the H6, only smoother – it seems the X1D has a more capable video processor or something because animations, scrolling and operation are just a lot slicker overall. Think of the difference between an iPhone 4 and iPhone 6S in terms of UI speed…

Build quality, haptics: one solid, solid block of metal. Nothing, anywhere, feels plasticky and/or hollow. Everything that looks like metal is metal, and some other parts, too. It actually feels better built than the H cameras; you touch rubber and a metal unibody, not plastic and a detachable grip. A note on weather sealing: every port is tightly gasketed, and the lenses require some effort to mount/unmount because the gasket fits so tightly against the mount. I would be far more confident in inclement weather with this than the H (too many components, no seals other than tightness of fit between them)

Battery life is comparable to my H5: about 3 hours total operation time. Three batteries will get you through a heavy day, assuming you never turn the power off. Power saving is aggressive and the battery is huge (3200mAH) – which probably helps. Charging time is unfortunately also similar to the H5/6, which is slow.

Nikon TTL: no idea yet, don’t have a speedlight with me. Note however that the duration for maximum power for most of their flashguns is about 1/900s, so you will see some loss at 1/2000.

Overall impressions: at the moment, it falls on the side of a deliberate, paced shooting tool rather than a run and gun street machine – but given the expectation is the thing performs like M4/3, that’s perhaps a bit unfair. I certainly think it’s no slower or less responsive than say a Sony A7RII in use – the bits that are slow we can live with; responsiveness is good though I’m told will improve with an EFC mode (not full electronic; rear curtain remains mechanical) that doesn’t require the leaf shutter to close first to expose. More features will also be implemented in due course – a firmware update is supposedly out for testers tomorrow.

Samples: click thumbnails below to go to the flickr page which will also have full resolution available if you click on the image itself, or one of the options on the lower right of the image container. (Update: links to full size fixed). I will add more to this album on flickr in due course. Images are processed with the same workflow I use for my H5/6 files – ACR recognizes the camera as a H6D. MT

The Hasselblad X1D camera and lenses are available to pre-order here from B&H. I do get a small referral fee from sales, which helps to pay for site bandwidth and hosting costs. More info is here on the Hasselblad site. There’ll also be a special bag made in collaboration with Billingham. Hasselblad says first deliveries begin end-August/early September.

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Masterclass Prague (September 2016) are open for booking. Please click the links for details and to book.

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Images and content copyright Ming Thein | mingthein.com 2012 onwards. All rights reserved

Filed under: Gearhead: Reviews, hasselblad

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