![]() The 5D Mark IV is Canon's first full-framer that can continuously focus in Live View during stills capture, and because of the way Dual Pixel AF works, focus is generally very accurate, even with fast lenses. ![]() The 150,000-pixel RGB-IR metering sensor, which feeds scene information to the AF system, is borrowed from the original 1D X, bringing enhanced subject identification (including faces) and tracking ('iTR'), as well as improved metering and flicker detection. In terms of AF, the increased coverage area is part of what makes the upgrade a big deal: after all, it's the same AF system found in the company's flagship sports camera. Dual Pixel Raw (image microadjustment, bokeh shift, ghosting reduction).Dual Pixel AF (sensitive to -4EV) for continuous Servo AF in stills (first for a full-frame Canon camera) and video.61-point AF system with 41 cross-type sensors (center point sensitive to -3 EV).DCI 4K 30/24p video using Motion JPEG + 4K Frame Grab.New 30.4MP CMOS full-frame sensor with Dual Pixel AF.On paper, the Mark IV seems to address these aspects nicely. While developing the IV, Canon says it sought feedback from 5D-series users and found that dynamic range, resolution, AF precision and AF speed were the four most important areas improvements were requested. We've seen that the camera suffers from some rolling shutter, but it may still have some merit for capturing the decisive moment when 7fps just isn't enough. Additionally, the camera allows for 4K Frame Grabs, effectively giving users 30 fps stills shooting with (Dual Pixel) AF. The center point is sensitive to -3EV in One Shot (AF-S) mode (in Live View the sensor is sensitive to -4EV with a fast lens).ĤK video capture is a welcome addition to this camera and users can record in either 24 or 30p, albeit with a 1.64x crop. The AF system is from the flagship 1D X Mark II and contains 61 AF points (41 of which are cross-type) with up to 24% expanded vertical coverage compared with the system in the Mark III. It is built around a new 30.4MP CMOS sensor and uses the Digic 6+ processor. All this adds up to a camera that fits into Canon's product line nicely as the all-around full-frame option. Nearly identical-looking to its predecessor, it receives substantial upgrades under the hood, including: a higher-resolution sensor with Dual Pixel autofocus, 4K video capture, an upgraded AF system, a touchscreen, improved weather-sealing, built-in Wi-Fi/NFC, an interval timer and GPS. The Canon EOS 5D series is arguably one of the most recognizable camera lines of the digital age and the Mark IV is designed to appeal to the same wide range of enthusiasts and professionals.
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