


It comes with a 1.6x sensor crop (that’s Canon’s APS-C format), which is not best suited for wide-angle shooting but potentially useful for telephoto video recording. There are, however, a few caveats with the EOS 5D Mark IV’s 4K video recording. The video specs of the two are quite different, with the EOS 5D Mark IV boasting 4K DCI recording at up to 30fps and the EOS 6D Mark II able to shoot Full HD (1080p) videos at frame rates up to 60fps.ĤK DCI recording is in a slightly wider aspect than in the regular 4K UHD resolution of 3860 x 2180 pixels, which results in a 17:9 aspect ratio, rather than 16:9. Canon EOS 6D Mark II: Full HD (1080p) up to 60fps, no slow-motion recording.Canon EOS 5D Mark IV: 4K DCI (4096 x 2180p) up to 30fps, with 1.6x sensor crop.Canon EOS 5D Mark IV vs EOS 6D Mark II: Video So, with fractionally higher sensor resolution and slightly better burst shooting, the EOS 5D Mark IV arguably has the edge in this particular battle. However, when it comes to the performance of the two, the EOS 5D Mark IV is in some ways slightly superior (see Burst Shooting). The EOS 6D Mark II features Canon’s latest DIGIC 7 processor, while the EOS 5D Mark IV has the previous DIGIC 6+ engine. Canon EOS 7D Mark II w/18-135mm f/3.5-5.The original EOS 6D was a smash among landscape photographers, and the Mark II (pictured) is likely to be just as popular.Canon EOS 5D Mark IV w/24-105mm f/4L IS II.Media: SDXC / SDHC / SD, CompactFlash Type II.Can cut out the JPEG still image of 8MP from 4K video.


150,000-pixel RGB + IR photometry sensor.Sensor: Effective pixels 30.4 million pixels, dual pixel CMOS.5D Mark IV will be officially announced on August 25, 2016. Finally, Full specs and images of upcoming Canon EOS 5D Mark IV has leaked online.
