![]() ![]() This has led him to being a go-to expert for camera and lens reviews, photo and lighting tutorials, as well as industry news, rumors and analysis for publications like Digital Camera Magazine, PhotoPlus: The Canon Magazine, N-Photo: The Nikon Magazine, Digital Photographer and Professional Imagemaker, as well as hosting workshops and talks at The Photography Show. He also serves as a judge for the Red Bull Illume Photo Contest. In this time he shot for clients like Aston Martin Racing, Elinchrom and L'Oréal, in addition to shooting campaigns and product testing for Olympus, and providing training for professionals. The editor of Digital Camera World, James has 21 years experience as a journalist and started working in the photographic industry in 2014 (as an assistant to Damian McGillicuddy, who succeeded David Bailey as Principal Photographer for Olympus). This means that, while it still offers head, face and eye tracking in video mode (thanks to the EOS iTR AFX technology, featured on the flagship Canon EOS-1D X Mark III), in video mode it cannot detect animals or vehicles – something that the base EOS R5 can do. However, when booted in video mode, the R5 C employs the original Dual Pixel CMOS AF – which is featured in all Cinema EOS products. In stills mode, the R5 C performs exactly like the standard EOS R5 – and it possesses the same Dual Pixel CMOS AF II technology, with Animal AF and Vehicle AF. In addition, video shooters almost universally use gimbals, which negates the need for IBIS altogether. This may seem a curious omission, but the fact is that videographers (and this is a video-first product) are generally not fond of IBIS – mainly because the compensation can cause Jell-O-like "warp" at the edges of the frame (particularly on wide-angle fields of view). However, the R5 C does offer electronic and combination image stabilization. ![]() Unlike the EOS R5 (and the Canon EOS R6 and Canon EOS R3), the Canon EOS R5 C does not possess any in-body image stabilization (IBIS) as the sensor is in a fixed position, which is a lot to do with heat dispersion within the camera body. Click here to see the full breakdown of how this affects video length. That said, recording durations are still governed by the format and settings at which you capture your footage, ranging from ½ hour to 30½ hours. It's not about the build-up of heat inside the product." Obviously with the R5, because it's a stills product first, you've got that limitation on the video shooting capability with this one, it's about your battery and about your memory card. The Canon EOS R5 C has an integrated cooling system – which, first and foremost, increases the size and weight of the camera (to 142 x 101 x 111mm and 680g (770g with battery and cards), from the 138.5 x 97.5 x 88mm and 650g (738g) of the R5).Ĭrucially, though, the new fan means that Canon has solved the heat build-up issue that throttled the original R5's 4K HQ and 8K video recording (and, importantly, still retains the dust- and water-resistance of the base camera).Īccording to Canon, there are "no limitations on shooting. Canon EOS R5 C Dual Base ISO (video mode only) Gamma settingsĨK 60p, 4K 120p with audio, "no limitations" ![]()
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