>>3370583>A7III at ISO 6400 being about the same noise performance as everyone else at ISO 3200Only it isn't. Canon looks the best. Nikon looks about like my D3400. The A73 looks like someone farted out sand art. Which is what my D3400 looks like past 3200.
>>3370592That would be nice for some things and a valid thing to do, especially in a studio situation. However, there are many situations where you don't want to add light, because it will ruin a certain effect. You may also not be able to control the environment since lighting can only reach so far out and scenes are moving along quickly.
>>3370616>A7iii with a Canon 70-200lol He'd need a speed booster for that to work well indoors if he'd want to get proper DOF that is.
>>3370607>filtered blowerI find that the blowers start to leak air and become less useful over time. That is they don't force air through the front tube as hard. I have to put my hand, thumb, finger or whatever over the back end, press on it then squeeze the bulb to get good air pressure. If the one in your image starts to do the same thing that filter on the back may cause problems.
>brushesGood for large particles like sand and clumps of dirt on a lens.
>swabsI find that a microfiber cloth + lens cleaner works best. PecPads are great for an initial cleaning when there's a mess, but I must go over it again with a new/cleaned microfiber cloth. I recommend getting lots of microfiber cloths and a pack or two of PecPads. Keep them in ziploc bags and have an extra bag for used microfiber cloths. Throw away used PecPads though. when you have a fair amount of dirty microfiber cloths you can wash them by hand. If you've used PecPads well enough then your microfiber cloths should be rather clean and easy to wash.
For the sensor, mirror, and viewfinder internals, I use a square-cut Popsicle stick with a microfiber cloth wrapped around it. Be GENTLE and use less spray than you think. Also, don't use PecPads on the sensor.