We have been issued Z9’s at work (ok, not me yet as it goes being the new guy, or is it because I am already sorted?), a camera that I feel is the current top dog in the full frame world, well, best all rounder anyway. It is definitely the best thing Nikon has made putting them back on the map, just a shame the rest of the system is still a little behind the competition.
Looking at my own gear, I am still happily sticking with my own system for all the reasons previously stated, probably only taking a “Z” when damage or very poor light are likely, but maybe not even then*. I am job sharing now, so the other tog will be stoked to get an instant upgrade. The deal breaker is that even though it is mirrorless, it is still weighed down by monster lenses, especially the older glass we have.
Looking sideways at the near future of travel to Japan starting up again, my kit is pretty solid. I have a lot of pro gear, lots of options and combinations, but travel has special needs.
Weight is the big one. The single easiest way to rob myself of that holiday feeling is to weigh myself down like I do at work (relative to the other guys that is). M43 was designed to be smaller, but can still get heavy with pro end gear and a 300mm f4 is a 300mm f4 in any system.
Coverage is secondary and really comes down to where and what. For Japan street, temple details and landscapes, a little wildlife and some city scapes are the core, so semi wide and short tele are fine, more is a bonus, but rarely needed. Lens speed is more useful, because we go out at night (and it is the land “Bokeh” came from).
Here is the travel kit;
2 bodies (2x EM10.2’s, or EM5.1’s or a Pen F + EPM-2). This is a little unsettled, but no big deal. Any of these would do. Possibly the Pen Mini on a long strap with 17mm, and one EM10.2 with a spare in the hotel room. On big days, I can take the second EM10 to save lens changes. Even just the weighty Pen F on its own.
9mm f1.7 Leica.
The emergency super wide or fake semi wide. It also does time as a macro, second wide and wet weather lens (depending on camera).
No Japan travel images from this one yet.
17mm f1.8.
The work horse of the lot and the only metal lens (but not weather proof). My street paragon, landscape ring-in and desert island lens.