Skip to main content

Yongnuo’s 4G smart mirrorless camera could cost under $500

Yongnuo

Yongnuo’s camera may not yet have a name but it does have some interesting specifications. Shortly after announcing a naming contest for a new smart mirrorless camera, budget brand Yongnuo shared more insight into the upcoming camera, temporarily dubbed the YN450, including a 16-megapixel Micro Four Thirds sensor. While details on the camera are still slim, a recent interview offered additional insight into the upcoming camera, including a potential price point below $500. Yongnuo is a China-based company that’s most known in the photography community for budget flashes and lenses.

The back of the teased photo looks more like a smartphone than a camera, thanks to the Android 7.1 operating system built inside, along with 4G and Wi-Fi. The camera uses a 5-inch 1080p touchscreen to navigate through that operating system.

The sensor-packed inside won’t be designed by Yongnuo, it will house a 16-megapixel sensor created by Panasonic. A Qualcomm eight-core processor will help process those images, with 4K support at up to 30 fps. The camera is slated to have a Canon EF lens mount, supports RAW shooting, and there’s a second 8-megapixel camera for selfies.

The camera will use 3GB of RAM with 32GB of storage. Yongnuo says the camera will also have GPS along with a headphone port and dual-MIC support.

Yongnuo isn’t the first to try to mix smartphone operability and connectivity with an interchangeable lens camera. Samsung’s NX1 was ahead of its time but the NX1 is only available used on Amazon after the company pulled out of the U.K. and hasn’t been updated in years. More recently, Zeiss announced the development of a full frame mirrorless camera that has a large touchscreen and Lightroom built in.

The image quality of a mirrorless camera with the connectivity and on-device editing of a smartphone isn’t a bad idea if Yongnuo can find the traction previous attempts couldn’t. But, there are a few oddities on the YN450. For example, the sensor is Micro-Four Thirds, but the lenses are Canon’s full-frame options. Full-frame lenses can work on a smaller sensor with a crop factor, but the lenses are larger and often more expensive than a 4/3 or APS-C lens. The camera is also missing a viewfinder and a hot shoe slot.

Yongnuo hasn’t set an exact date or price yet, but has suggested the camera will launch in China this spring, with a potential U.S. launch to follow. The price could be under $500, Cinema5D suggests.

Updated on March 7, 2019: Added potential price and availability information.

Hillary K. Grigonis
Hillary never planned on becoming a photographer—and then she was handed a camera at her first writing job and she's been…
TCL launches its first phones, and even the 5G version costs less than $500
tcl 5g smartphone interview ces2020 10 phones

TCL Communication has officially announced the TCL 10 Series of smartphones, which it teased during CES 2020 and had originally intended to announce during Mobile World Congress in February, had the show not been canceled. However, good things come to those who wait, and the TCL 10 5G, the TCL 10 Pro, and the TCL 10 L are all very good. What makes them good? These are smartphones that combine everything we want in a phone: Good specs, pleasing design, and a very competitive price.

TCL 10 5G
The TCL 10 5G is the model set to shake things up the most. It’s a 5G smartphone that costs just 400 British pounds, or about $490 U.S., making it just about the cheapest phone we’ve seen with the latest 5G connection technology inside. The Qualcomm Snapdragon 765G chipset and the X55 modem provide the power and 5G connectivity, along with 6GB of RAM and 128GB of storage space. The 210 gram body has curved glass on the front and back, with a 6.53-inch, 2340 x 1080 pixel LCD screen on the front.

Read more
Fujifilm X-T4 vs. Sony A6600: Top APS-C mirrorless cameras compared
Fujifilm X-T4

That Fujifilm and Sony are now direct competitors for flagship APS-C mirrorless cameras is a bit strange.

A few years ago, you picked Sony if you liked high-tech gadgets with fast performance, and Fujifilm if you were a more traditional photographer who preferred a slower, methodical approach to image making but still wanted high-quality results. The companies targeted different customers, and their products were fine living in their respective bubbles.

Read more
The Fujifilm X-T4 looks flawless. Is it the perfect camera?
fujifilm x t4 could be the perfect camera on table with coffee

 

It feels early to be excited about a new X-T camera, but here I am. Fujifilm has unveiled the X-T4 after openly teasing it for weeks, and I'm in a tizzy. (See what's new in our X-T4 versus X-T3 comparison.)

Read more