Canon EOS 5D mark 4 shooting kit

The Canon 5D mark4 shooting kit includes everything needed for a seamless tethering experience.
Specs;
30.4MP CMOS full-frame sensor with Dual Pixel AF. DCI 4K 30/24p video using Motion JPEG + 4K Frame Grab. 61-point AF system with 41 cross-type sensors (center point sensitive to -3 EV) Dual Pixel AF (sensitive to -4EV) for continuous Servo AF in stills (first for a full-frame Canon camera) and video. ISO 100-32000 (expandable to 102400) 7 fps continuous shooting
Dual Pixel Raw (image micro-adjustment, bokeh shift, ghosting reduction). 150,000-pixel RGB+IR metering sensor. 1.62M-dot 3.2" full-time touchscreen. Wi-Fi w/ NFC + GPS
first day
€ 70,00
€ 84,70
next days
€ 35,00
€ 42,35
excl. VAT incl. VAT

Included

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Documents

Description

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. 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. All this adds up to a camera that fits into Canon's product line nicely as the all-around full-frame option.

It is built around a new 30.4MP CMOS sensor and uses the Digic 6+ processor. 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. 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).

4K video capture is a welcome addition to this camera and users can record in either 24 or 30p, albeit with a 1.64x crop. All footage is captured as Motion JPEG. Additionally, the camera allows for 4K Frame Grabs, effectively giving users 30 fps stills shooting with (Dual Pixel) AF. 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.