Canon EOS R5
Overview | |
---|---|
Maker | Canon Inc. |
Type | Full-frame mirrorless interchangeable lens camera |
Released | Announced July 9, 2020 |
Intro price | $3899 (body only) |
Lens | |
Lens mount | Canon RF |
Sensor/medium | |
Sensor | Dual-pixel CMOS sensor |
Sensor size | Full-frame (36 x 24 mm) |
Maximum resolution | 8192 × 5464 (44.8 MP) |
Film speed | ISO 100 – 51,200 expandable to 64 – 102,400 |
Recording medium | Dual slots: CFexpress and SDXC (UHS-II) |
Focusing | |
Focus | Dual-pixel CMOS AF II |
Shutter | |
Shutter speeds | 30s - 8000s |
Continuous shooting | 12 fps mechanical 20 fps silent |
Viewfinder | |
Viewfinder | 5.76 million dot OLED EVF |
Viewfinder magnification | 0.76 |
Frame coverage | 100% |
Image processing | |
Image processor | DIGIC X |
General | |
Video recording | 8K RAW 29.97 fps 8K RAW 59.94 fps (EOS R5 C) 4K 119.9 fps |
LCD screen | 3.2” 2.1m dot |
Battery | LP-E6NH, LP-E6N |
Optional battery packs | BG-R10 grip allows the use of one LP-E6/N/H battery or two LP-E6/N/H batteries |
Dimensions | 138 mm × 97.5 mm × 88 mm (5.43 in × 3.84 in × 3.46 in) |
Weight | 650 g (23 oz) (body only), 738 g (26.0 oz) (incl. battery and memory card) |
Made in | Japan |
Chronology | |
Replaced | Canon EOS 5D Mark IV |
Successor | Canon EOS R5 Mark II |
The Canon EOS R5 is a professional full-frame mirrorless interchangeable-lens camera officially announced by Canon on July 9, 2020[1] alongside the lower-resolution EOS R6 and various new RF mount lenses. While it is not a direct successor to any of Canon's previous mirrorless cameras, it does have clear improvements and advantages over the EOS R, namely: a new DIGIC X processor and sensor, 8K video capture, a new autofocus system, and the ability to take videos with 10-bit colours.[2] The camera is available as body only, or with the Canon RF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM lens.
On July 17, 2024 Canon announced a Mark II version, with a new BSI sensor and increased frame rate, among other improvements.
Features
[edit]- 44.8-megapixel full-frame CMOS sensor[3]
- 8K raw video recording at up to 29.97 fps[3]
- 4K 10-bit video recording at up to 119.9 fps[3]
- 100% autofocus coverage[3]
- 5,940 user-selectable autofocus points[4]
- Native ISO range of 100 to 51,200; expandable 64 to 102,400[3]
- High-speed continuous shooting of up to 12 fps with mechanical shutter; up to 20 fps with the electronic (silent) shutter[3]
- Color depth of 10-bit for HDR videos[3]
- 5-axis in-body image stabilization which can provide up to 8 stops of shake correction[3]
- Dual card slots (CFexpress and UHS-II SD memory cards)[3]
- 0.5" 5.76 million dots OLED electronic viewfinder with 120 fps refresh rate and vari-angle LCD touchscreen[3]
- Canon's Dual Pixel CMOS AF II with Zero Crop & 100% AF Coverage[3]
- 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity[3]
- Optional wireless file transmitter and battery grip[3]
Reception
[edit]Overheating issues
[edit]Shortly after the EOS R5's initial announcement, concerns arose about issues of overheating while recording video, especially 8K video, after short periods of time. In response to users' complaints, Canon issued a media alert addressing these overheating issues, including how long it will take for the camera to overheat at each resolution, why a fan was not included, and how users can prevent the camera from overheating.
According to Canon's reported data, the EOS R5 will begin to overheat after recording for 20 minutes at 8K resolution though the average run time of videos published on social media is 11.7 minutes. A fan was not included to preserve its compact size. Users can delay overheating by toggling on "Overheat Control" in settings, which will adjust resolution and frame rate automatically to prevent overheating.[5][6] Although Canon offered this explanation, users have continued to complain.
Other testers, however, discovered continuous shooting is possible for up to four hours in 4KHQ mode with an external recorder if no memory cards are inserted, the screen is off, and a dummy battery is used. With an actual battery, again overheating can be avoided for the life of the charge of the battery, about one hour and 45 minutes.[7][8]
Canon EOS R5 C
[edit]Canon addressed overheating issues with a modified follow-up model, the Canon EOS R5 C, announced in January 2022.[9] Intended as a hybrid between the R5 and the EOS C video-oriented line of cameras, the R5 C includes a cooling fan. This allows the camera to shoot video at any resolution indefinitely, at the cost of a higher weight (770 g) and a larger size (142 x 101 x 111 mm).[10] The R5 C also omits in-body image stabilization. It can record in a larger variety of video modes than the base model, and it supports some additional video-oriented features such as false colour and timecode integration.[11]
Images
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "The Secret Is Out: Canon Officially Announces The Canon EOS R5 and R6, The Company's Most Advanced Full-Frame Mirrorless Cameras Ever" (Press release). Canon U.S.A. Inc. July 9, 2020. Retrieved July 9, 2020.
- ^ "Canon EOS R5 review". DPReview. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Canon USA (2020). "Mirrorless | EOS R5 | Canon USA".
- ^ "Canon EOS R5 - Outstanding Autofocus Performance". Canon Europe. Retrieved 2022-11-25.
- ^ Rumors, Canon (14 July 2020). "Canon releases an official statement about the EOS R5 and EOS R6 heat concerns". Canon Rumors. Retrieved 2020-07-19.
- ^ "Canon Explains EOS R5 Overheating, Why There's No Fan, and More". petapixel.com. 14 July 2020. Retrieved 2020-07-20.
- ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Canon R5 Overheating Saga Pt. 1 - Over 4 Hours External Recording Ninja V". YouTube.
- ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Canon R5 Overheating Saga Pt. 2 - Clearing the Smoke". YouTube.
- ^ Canon has officially announced its video-centric EOS R5c and this beefy beast costs $4,500
- ^ "Canon EOS R5C vs EOS R5: what's the same, what's different?". DPReview. Retrieved 2023-03-17.
- ^ "Canon EOS R5C vs EOS R5: what's the same, what's different?". DPReview. Retrieved 2023-03-17.