Inhouse product
Camera Features Audio Recording
Camera Features Auto Power Save
Battery Type Lithium
Colour Black
Brand Canon
Screen size 11.6 inches
The original was the first affordable full frame DSLR. It was a highly regarded and very successful model. With its excellent 21.1 MP full frame sensor, launched to instant success 3 years later. The image quality to price ratio of this model was exceptional, especially from a video perspective. The 5D II was Canon's first video-capable DSLR and it achieved great fame for its amazing video image quality for the price.
About three and a half years after the 5D II's arrival, the was announced. While the 5D III brought another image quality upgrade, the improvement, especially in resolution, was minimal relative to the improvement brought by version "II". The 5D III had many great upgraded features, but the standout was its amazing new AF system.
The 5Ds and 5Ds R models, not replacing the "Mark" series, took us back to a very significant resolution increase being the primary upgrade feature as we last saw with the 5D II. While many made the jump to the 5Ds models, there were also many holdouts waiting for something different in their upgrade path. The IV is what many of them were looking for, with a nice bump in resolution over the III, an improved AF system, improved video capabilities and much more.
The 5-Series cameras have been my primary bodies since the 5D Mark III (though a 1-Series model takes care of my sports and fast-action needs) with the 5Ds R bodies being the current model I'm using at 5D IV review time. The best-available in many respects, these are feature-filled, all-purpose cameras that are easy to use, feel great in hand and reliably deliver very impressive image quality.
The 5D Mark IV showed up on a Friday. I did much of the studio testing and evaluation immediately – we all wanted to know how the camera would perform and ... that gave me just enough time to put the camera in my pack for a 10-day Idaho and Grand Teton National Park wildlife and landscape photo trip with a departure the following Tue at 3:00 AM. I rotated the 5D IV and a pair of 5Ds R bodies through the lenses being primarily used at the time and I was left with no regrets. The camera performed impressively throughout this trip.
Let's take a look at what we get with the "IV".
Summary of Canon EOS 5D Mark IV Features
30.4 Megapixel Full Frame CMOS Sensor
7 fps continuous shooting and silent shutter mode
4k 30fps video with 8.8 mp still frame grab, Full 1080p HD 60 fps, HD 720p mode at 120 fps
Dual Pixel CMOS AF for responsive and smooth AF during video or Live View shooting
Dual Pixel RAW
Built-in GPS
Built-in WiFi, NFC (Near-Field Communication)
3.2" (81.1mm), approximately 1,620,000 dot Clear View II LCD monitor with full touch-screen interface, including selection of AF area
DIGIC 6+ image processor
61-point High-Density Reticular AF II system (like 1D X Mark II) including up to 41 cross-type AF sensors, with EOS iTR, f/8 AF
EV -3 AF sensitivity, EV -4 when in Live View mode
150,000-pixel RGB+IR, 252 zone metering sensor for improved AE and AF precision
Zone, Spot and AF Point Expansion focusing modes
ISO 100-32000 with expansion up to 102400, down to 50
Short 58ms shutter lag
Flicker Mode adjusts shutter release timing to avoid flickering light issues
Dual Memory Card Slots supporting one CF (UDMA Mode 7) and one SD/SDHC/SDXC (UHS-I) memory card
Upgraded Transparent LCD viewfinder with 100% coverage
Dual-Axis Electronic Level with dedicated viewfinder display
Time-lapse Movie function
EOS Integrated Cleaning System (EICS)
Peripheral Illumination, Chromatic Aberration, Distortion and Diffraction Corrections in-camera along with DLO (Digital Lens Optimizer)
Magnesium alloy body, shutter durability rated up to 150,000 cycles, improved dust and weather resistance
Mirror Vibration Control System to reduce mirror vibration-caused blur
Customizable Quick Control screen
+/- 5 stops of exposure compensation
Super Speed USB 3.0 for high-speed tethering and image/movie transfer
In-camera Multiple Exposure and HDR modes, HDR 30 fps video
Improved custom controls with built-in intervalometer and bulb timer
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