Sony Ilce7b Full Frame Compact System Camera Body 24 3 | Desertcart Sri Lanka
Sony ILCE7B Full Frame Compact System Camera Body (24.3 MP, 117 Points Hybrid AutoFocus, 3.0-inch Tiltable LCD, 5 fps, XGA OLED Tru-Finder) - Black
4.5/5
Product ID: 47918815
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Details
Compatible mountingsSony
Aspect ratio4:3
Photo sensor technologyCMOS
Supported file formatJPEG
Image stabilisationNone
Maximum focal length70 Millimetres
⚡117 AF Points
🌟ISO 50-51200
📸24.3MP Resolution
Frequently Bought Together
Description
📷 Capture the Extraordinary!
ADVANCED ISO RANGE - With an ISO range of 50-51200, shoot in various lighting conditions and achieve low-noise images.
COMPACT LIGHTWEIGHT - Weighing just 417 grams, this camera is designed for on-the-go professionals who demand quality without the bulk.
SPEED MEETS PRECISION - Experience lightning-fast autofocus with 117 points, ensuring you never miss a moment.
UNLEASH YOUR CREATIVITY - Capture stunning images with a 24.3MP full-frame sensor that delivers exceptional detail and clarity.
VERSATILE LENS COMPATIBILITY - Compatible with a wide range of Sony E mount lenses, tailor your setup to your unique photographic style.
The Sony ILCE7B Full Frame Compact System Camera Body features a 24.3MP Exmor CMOS sensor, 117-point hybrid autofocus, and a compact design, making it the perfect choice for professional photographers seeking high-quality performance in a lightweight package.
Specifications
Package Dimensions L x W x H
25.6 x 18 x 16.2 centimetres
Package Weight
1.26 Kilograms
Product Dimensions L x W x H
48 x 127 x 94 millimetres
Item Weight
417 Grams
Brand
Sony
Camera Lens
This camera is sold without lens (bare body). It is compatible with the Sony E mount, allowing the use of a wide range of interchangeable lenses. The choice of lens will depend on the specific needs of the photographer in terms of focal length, aperture and performance.
Colour
black
Continuous shooting speed
2.5 fps
Has image stabilisation
No
Included components
Camera Body, Power cord, Eyepiece cup, AC Adaptor AC-UB10, Accessory shoe cap, Body cap, Micro USB cable, Rechargeable battery NP-FW50, Shoulder strap
ISO Range
50–25600
Max Focal Length
70 Millimetres
Memory Slots Available
1
Minimum shutter speed
30 seconds
Model year
2013
Plug profile
Hot Shoe Mount
Part number
ILCE7B.CE
Water Resistance Level
Not Water Resistant
Zoom Type
Zoom óptico
Expanded ISO Maximum
51200
Autofocus Points
117
Focus type
Auto Focus
Maximum shutter speed
1/8000, seconds
Aperture Modes
2.8
Style
A7 Body only
Maximum Format Size
Full Frame
Effective still resolution
24.3
Guaranteed software updates until
unknown
Have a Question? See What Others Asked
Is the shutter totally silent for weddings and funerals?
Does it have Portuguese menus?
Does it come with a lens strap / any other extras, I've already wondering incase I have to order other items
Has anyone tried fixing a Leica lens to the A7 via an adapter? What is your experience please?
Reviews
4.5
All from verified purchases
R**Z
Focus peaking is awesome when on manual
Impresive little camera. I come from a 5D MKII and have a lot of Canon glass, which I use with adapters. Since I do landscape mostly, I don't require auto-focus. Focus peaking is awesome when on manual, and the dynamic range of the sensor is outstanding.I ended up buying a Sony Zeiss 55 f1.8 and it is the perfect couple for it. The image is superb and auto-focus is not bad at all (not at 5D MKII's level though). It comes quite handy for daily use as it is really tiny and lightweight.You can have a look at a picture I shot with it and Canon's 17-40 f4L here:[...]Sorry I haven't uploaded a lot more pictures from this camera yet, but feel free to google for samples with canon glass, there are some outstanding reviews out there.
N**E
Awesome camera
Finally dragged me away from Canon. Possibly the perfect landscape camera for me. Not as big as the DSLRs. Canon 5d has had to go. Lenses are a bit of an issue. I have the FE 35mm and the LA-EA4 adaptor which works brilliantly with the Sony 85mm 2.8 (read the reviews - quality at a bargain price) and the Minolta 50mm 1.4 AF which I picked up for £140 on eBay (this lens is awesome). I decided to keep my Canon 70-200mm L F4 IS zoom as there is nothing to match it from Sony for the money. With the Viltrox full frame EF-NEX AF converter, it even auto-focuses... and it has image stabilisation which none of the Sony lenses do. My final keeper lens is a Tokina 17mm FD mount manual focus lens.For walking and photographing I will carry just this camera the FE 35mm and my Tokina 17mm manual focus FD mount. With a tripod, a very tidy compact package.
D**E
My wait is over
It's probably worth saying that, the unloved Canon EOS M aside, there are no really bad mirrorless systems to buy into at the moment and that anyone in the market for the A7 or the A7R has probably also had a long hard look at the Fuji X series or an Olympus or Panasonic Micro 4/3 body.It can be a tricky decision, since for most people it’s an investment in a system including lenses and other accoutrements that rapidly cost more than the body alone. An investment that might reasonably be expected to last for 5 years or more.These other systems certainly have their attractions: The Fuji bodies have a striking retro SLR and rangefinder appeal with fast all metal prime glass purposely designed to set alight the hearts of photographers for whom a 35mm Summilux remains as dreamy as the Leica glow.The Olympus OMD EM1 pitches in with its weather sealing, quick autofocus and that very wide range of M43 lenses, all of which are good and some of which are the equal of anything made for a competing system, full frame or not.And yet, there is something about the final emergence of reasonably sized full frame in the digital world that feels to this old film SLR user like returning home to something sensible after a long and trying digital absence.Getting down to brass tacks, a few pros and cons after first use.+ Full frame at last ! No more having to multiply things by 1.3, 1.5, 1.6 or 2. DOF as she was in the 1980s when I were a lad. Stepping gently round internet flamewars about equivalence in DOF and light gathering.+ Manual lenses a plenty of course, with adaptors at £20 a pop. Buy now before the entire stock of R, OM, FD and PK lenses is exhausted in five years time and a battered Pentax 50/1.7 is going for £200.+ High ISO. Shoot with impunity. If you are printing at A4 or less it’ll look great at 6400.+ Dynamic Range. Wow. It’s good. You really do have latitude to mess up exposures and still come home with something worth looking at.+ It’s well made. The A7 has lots of metal and feels weighty but not heavy. Smaller than an M9.+ AF speed is fine for me with the Zeiss 35/2.8. YMMV of course, but no complaints from me.+ EVF is great. Refreshes quickly, dioptre adjustment works well. Sometimes it feels like an OVF.+ Looks innocuous enough in public, like any old Sony Bridge camera. No red dots to attract anyone.+ Buttons, Dials, switches, more buttons. If you would like to set the ISO with the Exposure compensation dial then Sony will not stand in your way.+ If you plump for the OMD EM1 or XT1, when the Sony A7 is rattling around second hand for £350 in a few years time, you are going to want to pick one up anyway, so why not short circuit the whole gear acquisition thing ?- Weather sealing. Yeh right. I wouldn’t shoot an A7 in the jungle any time soon. Beware.- Having to pay for useless add on applications to the firmware ? What were you thinking Sony.- firmware update process on 64 bit Mac. Plugin, run app in 32 bit mode and pray. How hard would it be to stick the firmware on an SD Card and get the camera to update itself that way ?- Auto ISO insists 1/60 is the right speed for everything all the time. If only that was 1/125. No way of changing it with the current firmware. One workaround is to shoot in manual, set the shutter speed and aperture with forward and back dials and let the ISO float.- It’s complicated. My brain hurts with so many options. No proper manual. Short instructions included in Albanian as well though, so that’s OK then.- Appeal of old MF glass is somewhat limited by the short registration distance and therefore long adaptors, the variability of adaptor manufacture (mostly of concern to pixel peepers I would have thought) and the fact that Leica M fitting wide angles (<35mm) are hit and miss depending on optical design, leading to vignetting and potential colour shifts. And having to manually focus, obvs.- I’m TAKING A PHOTO OF YOU ! LOOK AT ME BECAUSE OF MY LOUD SHUTTER ! I AM RUNNING AWAY AND I WISH I HAD BROUGHT MY LEICA M6 INSTEAD.- The Zeiss 35/2.8 is really a super lens. It should be the kit lens because it’s an affirmation of the design principle of a small FF camera. Beware that a lot future FE lenses will probably be big, heavy and expensive. It’s not going to be like Fuji X and definitely not like M43.- Sony will get bored with the FE mount in 3 years time and launch some other overlapping system with Leica S2 sized sensors and a new range of lenses, or stop making cameras altogether, or just make some other weird decision that makes you shake your head because it’s really a gadget maker not the bijou Wetzlar dream factory.I took a photo of my daughter sitting with a friend at a kitchen table. I realised later it was the first digital image I’ve taken that happily looked to my eye in all respects like film. Bokeh, DOF, framing, dynamic range, it all looked just like the images I used to capture on my Olympus Mju-II (with its 35mm/2.8). Home at last. Well done Sony.*** Update on 21 Aug 2015 after 12 months usageI remain happy with the choice. It didn't turn me into a much better photographer, but we all know that's not how it works I suppose.I did manage to knock the exposure compensation dial by accident and expose a week's worth of shots at -1 1/3EV, which was fairly stupid on my part, but the RAW images were all processable into printable photos without any trouble.My suspicions about lens size look right, the newer lenses like the Zeiss FE 35 1.4 are optically well reviewed behemoths and some of the new zooms laughably huge.Shutter sound's not actually that loud for most real life situations.At the time of writing the A7 II is a better bet because of the image stabilisation, so if you can stretch to it I would buy the newer model.
A**.
Amazing Camera at a great price
I believe this is the best camera if you are starting in the professional photography. The low light performance is really great, even taking pictures with low noise at 6400 ISO. The autofocus is smooth and the quality of the camera feels really nice.I could not recommend more this camera. The only downside is that it doesn't have in-camera stabilization, but the bigger brothers has it.
Z**K
Quality photos in a compact package
At last a full frame mirrorless digital camera. Well done Sony. It's small and light and can be used with a multitude of lenses with the correct adapters.I bought it to use with my Zeiss and Leica M mount lenses and it's perfect. The 24mp sensor captures amazing images and when paired with excellent optics it makes for a compelling package.The viewfinder is perfect and the articulated rear screen makes it easy for tripod work. When you consider this is a 1/4 of the price of a digital Leica M camera it's a real bargain.
M**T
Virgin user.
As a newcomer to mirrorless cameras i like the layout of the dials and the results are good.
Common Questions
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TrustScore 4.5 | 7,300+ reviews
Pooja R.
The customer service exceeded my expectations. Perfect for buying products you can't find elsewhere.
1 week ago
Ali H.
Fast shipping and excellent packaging. The Leatherman tool feels very premium and sturdy.
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I come from a 5D MKII and have a lot of Canon glass, which I use with adapters. Since I do landscape mostly, I don't require auto-focus. Focus peaking is awesome when on manual, and the dynamic range of the sensor is outstanding.I ended up buying a Sony Zeiss 55 f1.8 and it is the perfect couple for it. The image is superb and auto-focus is not bad at all (not at 5D MKII's level though). It comes quite handy for daily use as it is really tiny and lightweight.You can have a look at a picture I shot with it and Canon's 17-40 f4L here:[...]Sorry I haven't uploaded a lot more pictures from this camera yet, but feel free to google for samples with canon glass, there are some outstanding reviews out there."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"N***E"},"datePublished":"8 May 2014","name":"Awesome camera","reviewBody":"Finally dragged me away from Canon. Possibly the perfect landscape camera for me. Not as big as the DSLRs. Canon 5d has had to go. Lenses are a bit of an issue. I have the FE 35mm and the LA-EA4 adaptor which works brilliantly with the Sony 85mm 2.8 (read the reviews - quality at a bargain price) and the Minolta 50mm 1.4 AF which I picked up for £140 on eBay (this lens is awesome). I decided to keep my Canon 70-200mm L F4 IS zoom as there is nothing to match it from Sony for the money. With the Viltrox full frame EF-NEX AF converter, it even auto-focuses... and it has image stabilisation which none of the Sony lenses do. My final keeper lens is a Tokina 17mm FD mount manual focus lens.For walking and photographing I will carry just this camera the FE 35mm and my Tokina 17mm manual focus FD mount. With a tripod, a very tidy compact package."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"4.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"D***E"},"datePublished":"11 June 2014","name":"My wait is over","reviewBody":"It's probably worth saying that, the unloved Canon EOS M aside, there are no really bad mirrorless systems to buy into at the moment and that anyone in the market for the A7 or the A7R has probably also had a long hard look at the Fuji X series or an Olympus or Panasonic Micro 4/3 body.It can be a tricky decision, since for most people it’s an investment in a system including lenses and other accoutrements that rapidly cost more than the body alone. An investment that might reasonably be expected to last for 5 years or more.These other systems certainly have their attractions: The Fuji bodies have a striking retro SLR and rangefinder appeal with fast all metal prime glass purposely designed to set alight the hearts of photographers for whom a 35mm Summilux remains as dreamy as the Leica glow.The Olympus OMD EM1 pitches in with its weather sealing, quick autofocus and that very wide range of M43 lenses, all of which are good and some of which are the equal of anything made for a competing system, full frame or not.And yet, there is something about the final emergence of reasonably sized full frame in the digital world that feels to this old film SLR user like returning home to something sensible after a long and trying digital absence.Getting down to brass tacks, a few pros and cons after first use.+ Full frame at last ! No more having to multiply things by 1.3, 1.5, 1.6 or 2. DOF as she was in the 1980s when I were a lad. Stepping gently round internet flamewars about equivalence in DOF and light gathering.+ Manual lenses a plenty of course, with adaptors at £20 a pop. Buy now before the entire stock of R, OM, FD and PK lenses is exhausted in five years time and a battered Pentax 50/1.7 is going for £200.+ High ISO. Shoot with impunity. If you are printing at A4 or less it’ll look great at 6400.+ Dynamic Range. Wow. It’s good. You really do have latitude to mess up exposures and still come home with something worth looking at.+ It’s well made. The A7 has lots of metal and feels weighty but not heavy. Smaller than an M9.+ AF speed is fine for me with the Zeiss 35/2.8. YMMV of course, but no complaints from me.+ EVF is great. Refreshes quickly, dioptre adjustment works well. Sometimes it feels like an OVF.+ Looks innocuous enough in public, like any old Sony Bridge camera. No red dots to attract anyone.+ Buttons, Dials, switches, more buttons. If you would like to set the ISO with the Exposure compensation dial then Sony will not stand in your way.+ If you plump for the OMD EM1 or XT1, when the Sony A7 is rattling around second hand for £350 in a few years time, you are going to want to pick one up anyway, so why not short circuit the whole gear acquisition thing ?- Weather sealing. Yeh right. I wouldn’t shoot an A7 in the jungle any time soon. Beware.- Having to pay for useless add on applications to the firmware ? What were you thinking Sony.- firmware update process on 64 bit Mac. Plugin, run app in 32 bit mode and pray. How hard would it be to stick the firmware on an SD Card and get the camera to update itself that way ?- Auto ISO insists 1/60 is the right speed for everything all the time. If only that was 1/125. No way of changing it with the current firmware. One workaround is to shoot in manual, set the shutter speed and aperture with forward and back dials and let the ISO float.- It’s complicated. My brain hurts with so many options. No proper manual. Short instructions included in Albanian as well though, so that’s OK then.- Appeal of old MF glass is somewhat limited by the short registration distance and therefore long adaptors, the variability of adaptor manufacture (mostly of concern to pixel peepers I would have thought) and the fact that Leica M fitting wide angles (<35mm) are hit and miss depending on optical design, leading to vignetting and potential colour shifts. And having to manually focus, obvs.- I’m TAKING A PHOTO OF YOU ! LOOK AT ME BECAUSE OF MY LOUD SHUTTER ! I AM RUNNING AWAY AND I WISH I HAD BROUGHT MY LEICA M6 INSTEAD.- The Zeiss 35/2.8 is really a super lens. It should be the kit lens because it’s an affirmation of the design principle of a small FF camera. Beware that a lot future FE lenses will probably be big, heavy and expensive. It’s not going to be like Fuji X and definitely not like M43.- Sony will get bored with the FE mount in 3 years time and launch some other overlapping system with Leica S2 sized sensors and a new range of lenses, or stop making cameras altogether, or just make some other weird decision that makes you shake your head because it’s really a gadget maker not the bijou Wetzlar dream factory.I took a photo of my daughter sitting with a friend at a kitchen table. I realised later it was the first digital image I’ve taken that happily looked to my eye in all respects like film. Bokeh, DOF, framing, dynamic range, it all looked just like the images I used to capture on my Olympus Mju-II (with its 35mm/2.8). Home at last. Well done Sony.*** Update on 21 Aug 2015 after 12 months usageI remain happy with the choice. It didn't turn me into a much better photographer, but we all know that's not how it works I suppose.I did manage to knock the exposure compensation dial by accident and expose a week's worth of shots at -1 1/3EV, which was fairly stupid on my part, but the RAW images were all processable into printable photos without any trouble.My suspicions about lens size look right, the newer lenses like the Zeiss FE 35 1.4 are optically well reviewed behemoths and some of the new zooms laughably huge.Shutter sound's not actually that loud for most real life situations.At the time of writing the A7 II is a better bet because of the image stabilisation, so if you can stretch to it I would buy the newer model."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"A***."},"datePublished":"1 April 2019","name":"Amazing Camera at a great price","reviewBody":"I believe this is the best camera if you are starting in the professional photography. The low light performance is really great, even taking pictures with low noise at 6400 ISO. The autofocus is smooth and the quality of the camera feels really nice.I could not recommend more this camera. The only downside is that it doesn't have in-camera stabilization, but the bigger brothers has it."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"Z***K"},"datePublished":"15 December 2013","name":"Quality photos in a compact package","reviewBody":"At last a full frame mirrorless digital camera. Well done Sony. It's small and light and can be used with a multitude of lenses with the correct adapters.I bought it to use with my Zeiss and Leica M mount lenses and it's perfect. The 24mp sensor captures amazing images and when paired with excellent optics it makes for a compelling package.The viewfinder is perfect and the articulated rear screen makes it easy for tripod work. When you consider this is a 1/4 of the price of a digital Leica M camera it's a real bargain."},{"@type":"Review","reviewRating":{"@type":"Rating","ratingValue":"5.0"},"author":{"@type":"Person","name":"M***T"},"datePublished":"27 October 2019","name":"Virgin user.","reviewBody":"As a newcomer to mirrorless cameras i like the layout of the dials and the results are good."}],"aggregateRating":{"@type":"AggregateRating","ratingValue":4.833333333333333,"bestRating":5,"ratingCount":6}},{"@type":"FAQPage","mainEntity":[{"@type":"Question","name":"Is the shutter totally silent for weddings and funerals?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"I don't think the A7 and A7ii had really silent shutters, but I can confirm the A7iii is silent - see Menu 2 4 of 9. An excellent camera."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Does it have Portuguese menus?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"it had the option to change them"}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Does it come with a lens strap / any other extras, I've already wondering incase I have to order other items","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Hi James,You can find the supplied items with the camera here: (copy the link: http://bit.ly/2tkMATn)"}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Has anyone tried fixing a Leica lens to the A7 via an adapter? What is your experience please?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Lots of information has been published online regarding use of the Metabones adapters. I suggest you look at Steve Huffs website and also Luminous Landscape. I have used the Metabones adapter for Canon lenses and it allows full communication between camera and lens. Regards."}}]}]}