To help us provide you with free impartial advice, we may earn a commission if you buy through links on our site. Learn more

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
[/vc_column_text]

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV: Image quality

Let’s start by establishing that the 5D Mark IV’s photos are fantastic. What else did you expect from a full-frame Canon SLR? Details from its 30-megapixel sensor fell neatly into line between the 22-megapixel 5D Mark III and the 50-megapixel 5Ds. Noise levels at high ISO speeds were significantly lower than from the 5Ds, and a small but welcome improvement over the Mark III, particularly in terms of retention of fine detail in JPEGs. It also outperformed the Sony a7R II for noise levels but couldn’t quite match the 24-megapixel Nikon D750 for JPEG quality at fast ISO speeds.

The automatic exposure system handled tricky lighting conditions well but the camera doesn’t automatically raise the shutter speed to counteract detected camera shake or moving subjects. Most people spending this much will be happy to use shutter priority in these situations but I’d like the option for the camera to handle these issues automatically. I also noticed quite a few shots where details were slightly less than pixel-sharp, particularly for shutter speeds between 1/100s and 1/200s, and a couple of landscape shots where the viewfinder-based autofocus had focused on the foreground rather than the main subject.

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV sample shot 1

^ A well-balanced automatic exposure with natural colours. Focus is sharper in the immediate foreground than on the trees, though. (1/160s, f/7.1, ISO 100, 60mm)

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV sample shot 2

^ Excellent colours but focus isn’t quite pixel sharp once again. (1/125s, f/7.1, ISO 100, 50mm)

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV sample shot 3

^ Focus is better here, although that may be down to the faster shutter speed. (1/200s, f/5, ISO 100, 105mm)

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV sample shot 4

^ Pin-sharp focus with a faster automatic shutter speed. (1/320s, f/7.1, ISO 100, 93mm)

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV sample shot 5

^ There’s a bit of grain on the smooth gradients of the walls in this ISO 1600 shot but it’s well within print-quality standards. (1/30s, f/4, ISO 1600, 24mm)

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV sample shot 6

^ I set the shutter speed to 1/200s to freeze motion. Autofocus is spot on and the ISO 2500 setting has had very little impact on details or noise levels. (1/200s, f/2.8, ISO 2500, 35mm, shutter priority)

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV sample shot 7

^ Another excellent result at ISO 3200, this time with a slower shutter speed in artificial light. (1/40s, f/2.8, ISO 3200, 28mm)

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV sample shot 8

^ There isn’t much detail in the grass and foliage in this shot taken at dusk at ISO 6400 but it looks fine at modest sizes. (1/125s, f/4, ISO 6400, 105mm)

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV sample shot 9

^ The same goes for this ISO 12800 shot, although, as usual, the out-of-focus background shows noise more than the foreground. (1/60s, f/4, ISO 12800, 70mm)

Canon EOS 5D Mark IV review: Verdict

The 5D Mark IV builds on the exquisite Mark III to deliver a camera that is bang up to date and leaves barely anything to be desired. The £3,599 launch price is higher than the Mark III (£2,799) or the 5Ds (£2,999) cost at launch, though. It’s also vastly more than the superb Nikon D750, which currently sells for £1,599.

This is the first 4K camera I’ve reviewed that I would consider relying on its autofocus for mission-critical tasks. It isn’t completely infallible, but the success rate is close enough to be an acceptable risk. That’s a big breakthrough for news reporting, weddings, concerts and theatre performances, where it’s often not convenient to focus manually but you don’t have the option to shoot again if the autofocus messes up. It’s just frustrating that this breakthrough comes with such massive file sizes. If video is a priority, the Panasonic GH4 remains my top recommendation, especially as it costs just £999.

Still, Canon users now have yet another excellent model to choose from. It’s the best 5D model for video capture, performance, autofocus and — narrowly — image quality. I don’t think it’s an essential upgrade for Mark III and 5Ds owners, but this is the full-frame Canon SLR that I’d choose.

Pages: 1 2 3

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

Read more

Reviews