PIXII Leica M Mount digital rangefinder review – “The worst camera I have ever owned”
French company PIXII SAS first announced their new PIXII camera almost two years ago (literally just a couple of weeks shy), and then it was radio silence until July of this year when it finally went on sale. Itâs a Leica M mount digital rangefinder, but with a twist. It looks a lot like the Leica M10-D, but without a memory card slot.
The PIXII features an 11.1-megapixel sensor, comes with either 4GB or 8GB internal memory, has an APS-C global shutter (!) CMOS sensor and no LCD. Oh, and it costs over $3,000. Photographer Sam Hurd bought one and posted up a review with some sample photos. The opener doesnât sound promising, but keep watching.
Ok. This is, without a doubt, the worst camera I have ever owned
Thatâs the first line of Samâs review of the camera. And just from looking at the specs on-paper, and how youâre expected to use the PIXII, itâs not really all that surprising. 11.1-megapixel sensor and only 4GB or 8GB of internal storage with no memory card? Youâre essentially required to hook it up to your smartphone if you want to get any real use out of it. Images are transferred from the camera to your phone (hence the lack of memory card slot and minimal internal storage). It doesnât even have an LCD on the camera to review your shots.
That will be a drawback to many, but thatâs the thing that actually attracted Sam to this camera in the first place. Itâs a very niche camera, and Sam seems to fit within that niche and found it very intriguing. But the camera is far from perfect.
There are some positives, though. The build quality he says feels great and lenses mount to it very cleanly and firmly. âItâs not Leica-levelâ, he says, but itâs âin the ballparkâ. It shoots DNG files, so no proprietary raw formats or software to have to deal with, and there are very few buttons or interface options on the camera itself.
Itâs has only an electronic shutter, not a mechanical one. But given that itâs a global shutter CMOS, that shouldnât really be much of a major issue as far as the actual images go. It wonât have any of the downfalls of a standard electronic rolling shutter CMOS sensor. But the sound (or lack thereof) of an electronic shutter just isnât very satisfying. Itâs like shooting with your phone on silent mode and wondering if it actually even took a picture at all. But in the case of the PIXII, as you donât have an LCD to check back on your images, you donât really know for sure.
The ISO, he says, also isnât great, breaking down around ISO600-1250. Disappointing for a modern camera, but probably not entirely unexpected as global shutter CMOS sensors are still a relatively new technology in consumer products. The bufferâs also tiny, stalling after only four shots. So, donât expect much burst mode shooting.
Despite its downfalls, though, Samâs keeping it, because of the experience of actually using it and how tightly it integrates into a smartphone workflow. It is a very cool concept and one that I hope we see more companies pursue in their cameras. No, I donât want Canon, Nikon, Sony or anybody else to start producing digital rangefinders, but it makes no sense these days to produce a camera that canât easily integrate with a smartphone while shooting.
I think Iâll pass on the PIXII myself, though, and just wait for the others to catch up in that respect. If you want to check them out for yourself, head on over to the PIXII website.
[via ISO1200]