The following cards can be used with the camera. *1 : Type I, UDMA Mode 7 supported. *2 : UHS-I cards supported. When shooting movies, use a large-capacity card with a reading/writing speed (required card performance) shown in the table or higher than the standard specification. Test the card by taking a few movies in the desired quality and
5D Mark IV Open Body.Credit: Canon. Canon uses its own XF codec for recording 4:2:2 50mb/s video wrapped in an MXF format on the C line of cinema cameras, offering Canon Log as well for higher dynamic range. To keep differentiation between platforms, it's understandable not to bring that over to the 5D. Canon EOS 5D Mark IV: 4K DCI (4096 x 2180p) up to 30fps, with 1.6x sensor crop. 120fps slow motion at 720p Canon EOS 6D Mark II: Full HD (1080p) up to 60fps, no slow-motion 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 Both models have a 3.5mm microphone input and HDMI socket. However, another advantage of the 5D Mark IV is a headphone port, which the 6D Mark II doesn’t have. When comparing video specs, the 5D Mark IV has three features that the newer camera outright lacks. Note that these cameras – and most DSLRs – are not fully optimized for video There is a scan from a French magazine showing a complete review of the new Canon 5D Mark III, but from looking at the specs it is clear that the video features are improved from the Canon 5D Mark II. These are the updated video specs taken from the scan here: Full HD 30fps. ALL-I or IPB. ISO 100-25,600 standard. ISO 50-102,400 extended. The Canon EOS 5D Mark IV is still a very effective all-purpose full frame DSLR for professionals. Its 30MP sensor leaves it in a bit of a no-man's-land between its new 24MP and 45MP+ rivals, however, and its heavy 4K video crop factor is an annoyance when newer cameras offer full width capture. 6tnM.