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Canon EOS 5D Mark IV review: Approaching perfection

Our Rating :
£2,238.00 from
Price when reviewed : £3599
inc VAT

With welcome improvements to an already great camera, the 5D Mark IV is very nearly the perfect SLR

Pros

  • Great autofocus in video
  • 4K video capture
  • Peerless image quality

Cons

  • No articulated screen
  • Motion JPEG video capture result in enormous file sizes
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Canon EOS 5D Mark IV review: Autofocus and performance

There was nothing lethargic about this camera in normal use, however. I recorded shot-to-shot times of 0.4 seconds, and continuous mode hit its claimed target of 7fps. It continued until the card was full for JPEGs, and managed 21 RAW frames before slowing to 2fps — a strong result. After I’d enabled continuous autofocus, the camera delivered 5.9fps shooting and did a decent job of tracking moving subjects around the frame. The camera coped exceptionally well in the challenging conditions of a party lit only by moving disco lights.

Tracking autofocus was even more responsive in live view mode, thanks to the dual-pixel sensor, although performance was limited to 2.9fps. It was also slow in the Single drive mode with live view enabled, taking 1.4 seconds between shots.

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV review: Video

It’s exciting to have 4K video and dual-pixel autofocus in the same camera for the first time. I’ve seen 4K consistently outperform 1080p footage for detail levels, even when video projects are published in 1080p format. In the past, Canon SLRs have lagged behind Panasonic and Sony for detail levels in their 1080p videos, so the move to 4K is particularly welcome. Meanwhile, Canon’s dual-pixel technology has shown itself to be extremely effective at delivering smooth, accurate autofocus for video in the Canon EOS 70D, 80D and 7D Mark II. Bringing both of these technologies together in a full-frame camera bodes extremely well.

And, boy, does the Canon EOS 5D Mark IV deliver. Autofocus is smooth and responsive, with the touchscreen making it easy to move the autofocus point during capture, or to select a moving subject to track. Face detection works consistently well, with an option to jump between detected faces in the scene. There’s loads of detail in its 4,096 x 2,160 footage, although pixel for pixel it isn’t quite as crisp as the Sony a7R II or the Panasonic GH4. It also exhibited slightly more noise at faster ISO speeds.

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV 4K video comparison - ISO 200

^ 4K video frames aren’t exactly short of detail but the 5D Mark IV’s output isn’t quite as refined as the Panasonic GH4’s or the Sony a7r II’s.

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV 4K video comparison - ISO 3200

^ Noise levels at fast ISO speeds are a little higher, too. It looks like there’s no noise reduction applied to 4K video.

All three of these cameras use a cropped area in the middle of the sensor for their 4K output. In the GH4 and 5D Mark IV’s cases, it’s so that there’s one pixel on the sensor for each pixel in the 4K video. This sidesteps the need for digital resizing and anti-aliasing of each frame, which would significantly increase processing demands. On the GH4 this results in a 1.2x crop to get 4K (8-megapixel) video frames from its 16-megapixel sensor.

However, the EOS 5D Mark IV uses a 1.74x crop to produce 4K frames from its 30-megapixel sensor. That’s not necessarily a problem itself — after all, the GH4’s sensor has a 2x crop to start with so the 5D Mark IV’s usable sensor area for 4K is still bigger than the GH4’s. However, it does mean that wide-angle lenses won’t be so effective when shooting 4K on the Canon.

Another noteworthy feature is the use of Motion JPEG compression for 4K video. This encodes each frame as a discrete JPEG image, which virtually eliminates compression artefacts even for fast-moving scenes. The downside is the 500Mbits/sec data rate. That equates to 62MB per second, 3.7GB per minute or 225GB per hour of footage. Professional users may welcome the quality this delivers, but there’s a considerable financial and time cost attached to storing and manipulating this much data. For me, the GH4 and a77r II’s 4K footage encoded as 100Mbits/sec AVC format is far more manageable.

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Hardware
Sensor resolution30.4 megapixels
Sensor size36x24mm (full frame)
Focal length multiplier1x
Optical stabilisationAvailable in lenses
ViewfinderOptical TTL
Viewfinder magnification (35mm-equivalent), coverage0.71x, 100%
LCD screen3.2in (1,620,000 dots)
ArticulatedNo
TouchscreenYes
Orientation sensorYes
Photo file formatsJPEG, RAW (CR2)
Maximum photo resolution6,720×4,480
Photo aspect ratios4:3, 3:2, 16:9, 1:1
Video compression formatMOV (M-JPEG) at up to 500Mbit/s
Video resolutions4K (4096×2160) at 24/25/40fps, 1080p at 24/25/30/50/60fps
Slow motion video modes720p at 120fps (1/4.8x)
Maximum video clip length (at highest quality)29m 59s
Controls
Exposure modesProgram, shutter priority, aperture priority, manual
Shutter speed range30 to 1/8,000 seconds
ISO speed range100 to 102400
Exposure compensationEV +/-5
White balanceAuto, 5 presets with fine tuning, manual, Kelvin
Auto-focus modes61-point (41 cross-type): single, zone, multi. Live view: flexible spot, multi, tracking with face detection
Metering modesMulti, partial, spot, centre-weighted average
Flash modesAuto, forced, suppressed, slow synchro, rear curtain
Drive modesSingle, continuous, self-timer, AE bracket, WB bracket, flash bracket, interval, HDR
Physical
Lens mountCanon EF
Card slotSDXC, CompactFlash Type I
Memory suppliedNone
Battery typeLi-ion
ConnectivityUSB 3, mini HDMI, wired remote, PC sync 3.5mm microphone, 3.5mm headphone
WirelessWi-Fi, NFC
GPSYes
HotshoeCanon E-TTL
Body materialMagnesium alloy
AccessoriesUSB cable, neck strap
Weight800g
Dimensions (HxWxD)116x151x76mm
Buying information
WarrantyOne year RTB
Price including VAT£3,599
Supplierwww.wexphotographic.com
Detailswww.canon.co.uk
Part code1483C026AA

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