Whereas, assuming you have a warmed battery to insert, the Canon 1DX III or D6 will likely work in bad weather at that temperature without the camera having had to be warmed up. There's no doubt that you can take the A7RIII, or a camera of similar build quality, out of its warm protective case, insert an even warmer battery and likely use the camera on a Everest climb, as long as the weather is good and it's not 40 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. Stop with the, "but see the A7RIII went to Everest", top only implied. It's also gritty and windy-as the Lens Rental blog you linked point out. The the chemistry of the desert upon which Burning Man is held is, I believe, alkali. The A7R, A7RII, A7II, A7RIII, A9, A9II, A7RIV, A7SIII and A1 all have different bodies whilst superficially looking very similar in some cases. There is a group of users (usually Canon for some reason) who seem to be under the impression that all the A series bodies are the same, when Sony has changed its body design on practically every camera. You can't do this unfortunately as the A1 has a new body design. "I have not held an A1 in my hands I am just extrapolating based on A7 and A9 series." A much better resource is a diagram of the seals of each camera. When evaluating the level of sealing of a new camera body, your gut can't help you. Gut feeling is that the Sony bodies do not have the same level of environmental sealing as the Nikon/Canon pro bodies."
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