Canon R5 Field Review for Wildlife & Bird Photography

 
Canon R5.jpg
 
 
 
Author Will Goodlet
 

This website uses affiliate links, meaning: at no additional cost to you, I earn a small commission if you click-through and make a purchase. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. I only feature products that I believe in and use.

Your support means the world to me and allows me to host this website. Thank you!


Using the Canon R5 for Wildlife & Bird Photography

Notes:

  • I pay for my gear. I am not affiliated with Canon.

  • This is a Preliminary Review - I will be adding MUCH MORE including a setup guide.

  • This is a field review about using the Canon EOS R5 in real life

 
 

Summary

The Canon EOS R5 is an exceptional wildlife and bird photography camera. It equals or exceeds equivalent DSLR’s in many categories and makes new ways of shooting wildlife possible for the first time in the Canon system.

Compared to top end wildlife centric DSLR’s It is let down only by slow (compared to DSLR’s) EVF spool-up times (a feature of mirrorless cameras with electronic viewfinders) and poor battery life.

Positives

The Canon EOS R5 is a serious stills camera and an accomplished addition to the wildlife and bird photography line up.

Larger Body Format

It has a relatively large body for a mirrorless camera (still smaller than a DSLR) that makes it easier and more confident to hold when using large super-telephoto lenses.

The button and control placements make it easy to switch from using a Canon DSLR to the R5 mirrorless without trouble.

Electronic Viewfinder

The excellent Electronic Viewfinder is so good that it is almost the same as looking through an equivalent Optical Viewfinder.

Second Generation Dual Pixel Autofocus & Eye AF

While, the packaging and ergonomics make the camera very familiar to Canon DSLR users the camera also features some exceptional specification upgrades

Most notably, the autofocus benefits from second generation Dual Pixel Auto Focus (DPAF), full coverage across the sensor and game-changing Animal Eye Auto Focus.

The improved AF makes the job of the wildlife and bird photographer much easier.

By taking away the need to manage focus points, the photographer is free to concentrate on composition or even to take one’s eye away from the viewfinder to look at the subject (and wider scene) directly.

Fast Frame Rates for Action

At the same time the R5 offers 20 Frames per second with autofocus in the electronic shutter mode and an excellent 12 FPS mechanical shutter option (with battery charge > 60% and compatible lenses).

In Body Image Stabilisation

The R5 also offers a Canon first, market leading in-body image stabilisation (IBIS).

EF Lens Compatibility

Canon has been thoughtful to provide backward compatibility with the EF lens line-up. An important factor in persuading many DSLR users to make the switch to mirrorless.

The EF-RF adapter appears to be robust and, at least in my testing, EF lenses have worked perfectly with the RF mount. I don’t own any RF mount lenses.

More than that, the lenses appear to function just the same as they do on native EF mount DSLR’s.

45mp Full Frame Sensor

There is also a very welcome resolution bump to 45MP, making this new Canon body an extremely compelling option at the top end of the market.

Cropping is always important for bird and wildlife photographers, The boost in resolution effectively combines the functionality of my 7d Mark ii and 5D Mark iii into one body.

Battery Compatibility

The EOS R5 is backward compatible with both the LP-E6 and LP-E6N battery. This is fantastic because many Canon shooters will already have a lot of these batteries hanging around.

I should note that full 12 FPS frame rates can only be achieved with a LP-E6NH battery at greater than 60% charge.



Negatives

However, the Canon EOS R5 is not without its flaws.

Electronic Viewfinder & Lag

The most important, from a wildlife perspective, is common to most mirrorless cameras.

It takes time for the EVF to turn on when bringing the camera to the eye.

This is important for surprise sightings of wildlife and birds. Without the immediacy offered by an optical finder, there is a significant risk of losing these types of shots - which can be some of the very best opportunities in the genre.

With mirrorless cameras, the viewfinder offers an electronic readout of sensor data. Often this results in viewfinder lag. Although the R5 manages this very well, it is noticeable in Mechanical shutter mode and can cause lost shots.

However, when using very fast shutter speeds and a fully charged LP-E6NH battery, the lag is negligible and birds can be tracked easily.

The viewfinder lag is also imperceptible when using Electronic shutter at all states of battery charge (this is my preferred mode because there is little risk of rolling shutter for bird in flight).

Canon EOS R5 Freezes

The R5 sometimes ‘freezes’. The camera stops working for 20-30 seconds. The EVF freezes, then goes dead. There is a ‘clunking’ noise and either the camera restarts or requires the battery to be removed.

This has been widely reported by many users with adapted EF lenses but, crucially, also by some using native RF lenses.

I have sent my R5 back to Canon for a warranty evaluation as a result of this issue.

Battery Life

Although touting excellent battery life compared to other mirrorless offerings. The need to keep activating the EVF (avoiding blackout) during long wildlife sightings means that the camera eats batteries. Especially when compared to DSLR’s.

It is advisable to purchase additional LP-E6NH batteries and, if possible, the dedicated BG-R10 grip if the intention is to use the camera for long periods in the field.

For photographers in remote locations, very cold conditions or without access to charging, this may make the camera unusable.

Memory Cards

Another notable negative is the inclusion of two different card formats - probably for the 8K video shooters out there - CFexpress and SD UHS II.

For stills a more practical arrangement would have been two slots of the same kind.

I am getting good value from the Angelbird 512GB memory card combined with a Sandisk UHSII.


RECOMMENDED CF EXPRESS TYPE B CARDS

 

Animal Eye-AF

Although welcome, the inclusion of Animal Eye-AF (AEAF) is not perfectly implemented.

AEAF can be fooled in darker situations, at times where the photographer has deliberately underexposed, where the subject is darker or has less contrast between eye and body, as well as where there are strong points of contrast in the subject or for strongly backlit subjects.

Focus is also noticeably slower in low light.

Moreover, while AEAF is very good for birds, dogs and cats, it does not work as well for many African antelope species where the system will tend to hunt out points of contrast like the interior of ears, tips of ears, horns etc…

Video Overheating

The R5 has suffered a battering at the hands of Youtube critics for its propensity to overheat in certain video modes. A new firmware update has made this much better, especially for discrete clips.

 

PROS

  • Excellent image quality and resolution (45MP)

  • Deep RAW buffer and fast clearing

  • Improved dynamic range at ISO400+

  • Superb in-body stabilisation

  • 12FPS Mechanical Shutter (9 FPS with < 60% battery and some EF lenses)

  • 20FPS Electronic Shutter

  • Flip out touch screen

  • Exceptional Built-in Electronic Viewfinder with high refresh rate

  • 3 EF-RF adapter styles

  • Buttons can be re-mapped

  • 100% AF point coverage

  • Animal Eye Autofocus

  • Backward compatible with older batteries

  • 4K 60 - Video is excellent for wildlife uses

  • Exceptional video Dual Pixel autofocus in all modes

  • Compressed RAW files are excellent and half the size

CONS

  • Viewfinder blackout at surprise sightings

  • Camera sometimes ‘Freezes up’

  • Battery life not as good as DSLR

  • Animal Eye AF does not work perfectly for all animals.

  • No pro-level RF Super-telephoto lenses available

  • Card slots are different formats

  • Micro HDMI Port

  • No USB-C to USB 3.0 Adapter supplied

  • Well publicised overheating in certain video modes

  • Well publicised IBIS ‘video wobble’ with wide angle lenses

  • Canon CR3 files not yet fully supported by Adobe software

  • Does not (yet) work with EOS Webcam Utility

 


RECOMMENDED - CANON RF 85MM F2 MACRO IS STM

If you are looking for good value lenses for the Canon R5, one suggestion is the RF85mm F2 Macro STM lens.

It’s equipped with a Silent Tracking Motor (STM) which makes it good for autofocus in video, along with a beautifully bright f2 aperture. The 85mm focal length is excellent for both macro work and for portraits.

Being a macro lens means it is of exceptional quality even though it lacks the famous Red Line of an ‘L’ series lens. Particularly where chromatic aberrations are concerned.

This is one of three lenses I recommended to my sister for her lifestyle and food work. Go check her out!


 

How I plan to use the Canon EOS R5

Hybrid Wildlife Stills & Video

I bought the EOS R5 for hybrid shooting of wildlife stills and video clips. Because the camera is mirrorless, I can switch between stills and video operation in the electronic viewfinder. There is no need for an external display or recorder.

As I grow older, this feature has become vital because I can no longer read the LCD without glasses (which I prefer not to wear as they get in the way).

With the EVF, I can easily see if video and stills are in focus and can leave the reading glasses at home.

The inclusion of a Canon first, IBIS, means that I can now use this camera for hand-held filming with no gimbals or rails. This has significantly lightened my kit when in the field.

I shoot a Canon 7D mark ii and 5D mark iii. I plan to replace the 5D with a mirrorless R6 body and keep the 7D Mark ii for its optical finder and as a surprise ‘grab’ camera on safari.

At established sightings, I would use the R5.

It is important to note that in Africa we shoot mostly from vehicles = mobile battery chargers.

Why I chose the R5 over the R6 and 1DX Mark iii

I am unusual in the African wildlife context in that I shoot a 400mm f2.8. This is widely considered as too short for birds and barely adequate for wildlife.

This is especially true for me as I rarely have the opportunity to follow an animal off road (and therefore get close to it) as I don’t have the finances for expensive safaris. I shoot in national parks where off road driving is not allowed.

Consequently, I need to crop a lot of my images. A high resolution full-frame body allows me to treat my 400 mm f2.8 like a digital zoom.

I have the wide field of view offered by the shorter 400mm (for example to photograph elephants) and the resolution offered by the R5 or 7D Mark ii for photographing Lilac Breasted Rollers.

Combined with liberal use of teleconverters, the R5 has finally given me what I have been waiting for. A Swiss army knife camera and lens combination - ideal for my style of photography.

The full frame and high resolution 45 MP sensor were key in this decision. If I shot the 600mm f4 instead, the R6 would have been more acceptable.

Advantage of 4K 60 / 4K 50

In video mode, I can flip between 1080p 50fps (I hope 100fps with the next firmware update), 4k 25fps and 4K50fps.

The R5 also features a crop video mode which is actually helpful for wildlife where reach is always an issue.

Even so, with digital image stabilisation active in video mode, the output is still heavily cropped over the field of view for stills shots. This has been making life difficult because I don’t use a zoom lens.

Framing up for a still, then switching to video brings the subject too ‘close’ but turning off digital image stabilisation is risky for very long lenses where every tiny shake is magnified.

With the ability to use 4K50 video, I can confidently shoot smoother wildlife video because the faster frame rate evens out bumps and jerks that are such a problem when using super telephoto lenses.

More than that, the 4K resolution allows me to crop into the shot when needed and still produce good quality footage.

Electronic Viewfinder (EVF)

As mentioned, I need reading glasses these days. It’s the worst thing about turning 40+! I can no longer see what’s in focus on my DSLR LCD screens, which makes them very difficult to use for video but fine for stills (in fact preferred for stills).

The EVF on the R5 is superb and makes it much easier to judge both focus and exposure when shooting video.

However, compared to an optical finder the highlights can sometimes appear compressed even though they are not always overexposed in reality. The ability to include a histogram in the shooting display is fantastic.

For me, this is not ideal because a lot of the reason for being a wildlife photographer is the simple enjoyment of watching animals.

Watching wildlife through an optical viewfinder is more enjoyable than watching through the R5.

Having said that, the R5 has such a good viewfinder that mostly it is hard to tell the difference.

 
Canon EOS R5 Back
 

RECOMMENDED WILDLIFE LENS - CANON 100-500

If you are looking to pick up a super-sharp, portable and fast-focusing wildlife lens, then the Canon 100-500 should definitely be on your radar.

I don’t feel there’s much need or point for a teleconverter on this lens, especially when you consider the Canon R5 has a crop mode that will allow tighter framing of smaller subjects.

It’s compact, light, incredibly fast to focus and a perfect wildlife walk about lens for the R5.


Canon EOS R5 Ergonomics & Button Assignments

Electronic Mode Dial

The addition of the electronic mode dial has actually improved the use and ergonomics of this camera over older DSLR models like my 7D mark ii.

Now, with three dials, one can control ISO, Shutter Speed and Aperture independently without having to press any other buttons.

For a manual shooter, this is actually a most welcome feature.

 
Canon EOS R5 Mode Dial
 

Changing Settings

Where one wants to change other settings it is merely a case of depressing a button to dial swiftly through the options presented in the electronic viewfinder. There is no longer any need to remove the eye from the EVF!

This extends to the information and menu systems which can all be presented in the EVF. I now shoot the camera with the LCD closed to conserve battery and access all the functions in the EVF.

6 Custom Settings Video + Stills

The R5 has also introduced separate Custom modes for stills and video. Whereas previously, I would set up ‘C1’ for stills, ‘C2’ for 25fps video and ‘C3’ for 100fps video, the R5 allows three separate custom settings in each mode.

This division between stills and video goes deeper.

Custom button assignments can be made separately in each mode. This is a feature I find useful because, for the most part, in stills mode, I like to use Back Button Focus (AF-ON) and in video mode I like to use Back Button AF-Stop (AF-OFF).

Now I can!

Custom Menus

Like all Canon cameras, the internal menus are excellent and it is possible to set up custom menus visible in the EVF (unlike DSLR’s). So there are infinite ways to change settings without taking your eye from the viewfinder.

Custom Button Assignments

With the new Animal Eye AF modes, it is actually crucial to customise the button assignments for autofocus and autofocus cases.

Sometimes the Animal Eye-AF needs some gentle ‘prompting’ to chose the right animal or the right subject. Using a single point back button to single out the animal and then the Eye-AF back button to track it is a preferred technique.

The Canon button assignment interface allows us to go deep. We can customise more than function (for example, Back Button Focus) but also Mode and Case.

For example, I set up the AF-ON button for Animal Eye AF with a Tracking Mode and sticky Case. This allows the focus system to stay locked on to a bird that may pass in front of busy backgrounds or behind grass stems and bushes.

At the same time, I can set up the Exposure Lock button for AF-ON with a Single Centre Point AF Mode and a different AF Case.

And finally, I can set up yet another button for a Wide Area Tracking Mode, with sticky Case, yielding Triple (or more) Back Button Focus at the touch of the respective button.

See my in depth video for more info on Focus Techniques for Wildlife.

Ergonomics

The EOS R5 has a very familiar feel in the hand. With a deep grip, the body is easy to hold on to. High quality rubber laid over the magnesium alloy body also adds to this confident impression.

The large LCD screen and slightly smaller form factor of the camera has led to some compromises in button placements.

The array of left side buttons that used to decorate the DSLR models has gone and the right side buttons are now a little more squashed together.

Buttons.jpg

The main fallout from this is the positioning of the AE-Lock and Focus Point Selection buttons at the extreme upper right edge. With my larger hands, I find these require some contortion and strain to use.

This is important for wildlife and bird photography on this camera because these buttons are often reassigned to 2nd and 3rd Back Button Focus and we are required to depress them for long periods.

For those using only a single Back Button Focus option - the separation of AF-ON from AE-Lock may come as a relief and minimise accidental depression of AE-Lock instead of AF-ON.

The thumb dial remains (thankfully!) but is now smaller than before, which can make it a stretch to reach when using the BG-R10 grip in portrait orientation.

With the narrower barrels of EF lenses (all I have access to) and the spacing made by the EF-RF adapter, there is no rubbing of fingers against the lens (as with some other mirrorless cameras and brands).

Button Reassignment

The ability to so effectively customise button assignments makes the Canon EOS R5 a pleasure to hold and use. The slightly smaller form factor has not been a problem for me at all.

The addition of the BG-R10 grip (very necessary for battery life) makes the camera look and feel like a 1D series body.

Once customised, it will have a very familiar feel and use to any of the other Canon DSLR bodies. For me, this is important because I still plan to shoot both Mirrorless and DSLR interchangeably on safari.

Being able to pick up either type of camera and use it without searching for functions is vital to securing great wildlife images.

Menu Button Placement

So far there have only been a few niggles with the camera.

The ‘Menu’ button on Canon cameras has always traditionally been on the left upper side of the body.

 
Canon EOS R5 Menu Button
Canon EOS R5 Menu button reassigned
 

In the past this wasn’t a problem because the menu system displayed to the LCD only.

Now, the menu system can be displayed to the EVF but placing the ‘Menu’ button on the top left means that the right thumb cannot activate the menu.

Instead, you have to take your eye away from the finder. Press menu with the left thumb and bring the eye back to the finder.

I am finding this awkward.

Instead, I have assigned the Menu function to the ‘Depth of Field Preview’ button.

Now, EVERY major setting is accessible with the right hand and it is unnecessary to move the eye away from the finder for any reason.

Canon EOS R5 + 400mm F2.8 L IS USM ii + 1.4 TC - Eye - AF mode

Canon EOS R5 + 400mm F2.8 L IS USM ii + 1.4 TC - Eye - AF mode

Trash Button Assignment Impossible

One other irritation is the impossibility of reassigning the ‘Trash’ button. On the lowly Canon M50, one can reassign it but not on the R5 (with firmware V1.10).

As I never delete in camera, I would like to assign the ‘Trash’ button to switch between video and stills mode.

Cannot Re-Assign Battery Grip Buttons

Another ergonomic issue appears in portrait orientation when using the BG-R10 battery grip.

Sadly, the button assignment menu does not allow reassignment of the grip buttons. They do not appear at all.

Instead, they mirror the button associations made to their landscape orientation counterparts.

Canon EOS R5 + BG-R10 Grip

Battery Grip Has No Mode Button

There is no ‘Mode’ button on the grip. This makes it awkward to change mode, one has to bring the left hand back off the lens (impossible if hand holding) to depress the mode button, most probably with the left thumb.

It would be preferable to reassign the ‘Magnify’ button on the grip to ‘Mode’ instead. But this is impossible.

Thankfully, the grip includes a Mode dial so we still have the three controls available to adjust exposure manually.

Canon R5 Top View
Canon EOS R5  with BG-R10 Grip
From Left to Right: Canon 5D Mark iii, Canon R5, Canon 7D Mark ii

From Left to Right: Canon 5D Mark iii, Canon R5, Canon 7D Mark ii

 
Canon EOS R5 + 400mm F2.8 L IS Mark ii

Canon EOS R5 + 400mm F2.8 L IS Mark ii

 

Using the Canon EOS R5 with adapted EF Lenses

 
 

In my tests the Canon EOS R5 works very well with EF and EF-S lenses via the EF-RF adapter. However, many have reported a ‘freezing EVF’ issue. This has happened repeatedly with my 400mm F2.8 when using teleconverters.

Others report the issue with variously, 500 F4, 100-400 Mark ii, 300 F2.8 and the RF70-200 F2.8.

Some have also reported Image Stabilisation compatibility error messages when using the older Canon 100-400 F4.5-5.6 L IS USM Mark i lens.

Focus in most conditions is fast and accurate and I can’t really tell the difference between the lens in use on the R5 and a DSLR. I know this is not a scientific comparison but the important thing for me is that I can use EF lenses with this camera.

Differences in performance

However, lenses do not all function the same on the R5.

There is a list on the Canon website showing which are fully compatible and which have reduced frame rates.

For example, the EF 100-400 F4.5-56. L IS USM Mark ii is able to shoot at 12 FPS while my Canon 400mm F2.8 L IS USM Mark ii is able to shoot at 9 FPS.

As far as I can tell, in electronic shutter mode, there is no practical difference between lenses. The camera releases at lightning speeds.

I have also tried the R5 with the only 3rd Party lens I own, the Sigma 14-24 F2.8 Art and this lens also works flawlessly.

CANON EOS R5 + 400mm F2.8 L IS USM ii + 2X TC

CANON EOS R5 + 400mm F2.8 L IS USM ii + 2X TC

Battery charge state

The Canon EOS R5 is slated to shoot at 12FPS only when the provided LP-E6NH battery is at greater than 60% charge.

This condition is indicated by a green icon in the viewfinder.

I’ve noticed that the camera, when shot in mechanical mode, has a stacatto lag that can make tracking subjects in mechanical shutter mode difficult.

With the battery fully charged and a suitably fast shutter speed dialled in, I found that tracking becomes much easier, In fact very easy. Even on lenses slated to work at the slower 9FPS.

In Electronic shutter mode, these problems disappear.

Canon EOS R5 + 400mm F2.8 L IS USM Mark ii + 2X Teleconverter

Canon EOS R5 + 400mm F2.8 L IS USM Mark ii + 2X Teleconverter

Canon EOS R5 with adapted EF Lenses and Teleconverters

In short I feel that EF lenses and EF Lenses with Teleconverters work pretty much the same as they do on EF mount DSLRs.

The major point of difference is that autofocus is still possible across the full width of the sensor with both the EF 1.4x and EF 2x teleconverter attached.

Autofocus also works across the full sensor when the EF1.4x and EF2x are stacked! But focus speed is slower.

You cannot stack the EF 1.4x with the EF 2x directly. You have to use an extension tube between them which means that you lose focus at infinity.

This is a fantastic achievement and makes the long line-up of Canon glass a real bonus for the RF format.

Note: My testing was done with the Canon 100-400mm F4.5-5.6 L IS USM Mark ii and EF1.4x III and EF 2x III.

CANON EOS R5 + 100-400mm F4.5-5.6 L IS USM Mark ii

CANON EOS R5 + 100-400mm F4.5-5.6 L IS USM Mark ii

Frozen EVF Problem

I had a problem while shooting the R5 with Canon 400mm F2.8 L IS USM Mark ii EF 2x iii teleconverter. It occurred four times in a row.

During shooting with mechanical shutter after a 20+ frame burst the EVF froze for around 5 seconds. After which, the EVF blacked out, the Image Stabilisation system made a ‘clunking’ noise, similar to the noise it makes when the camera is turned off, and then the EVF started working again.

So far, this behaviour has not been repeated. I wonder if there is a possibility that the communication between lens and camera failed or the teleconverter was poorly seated?

Memory Card Problems

I had another problem, which I may as well mention in this section. Using a Lexar 2000X 64gb UHS ii card, the camera returned an error several times. This card is marked ‘compatible’ on the Canon website.

A card communication Error #2: Remove and reinsert the card or format it.

This error occurred repeatedly, so much so that I found the card to be unusable in the field.

I tested the card using specialist software and reformatted it using the same software and still experienced the problem. The software indicated no issues with the card.

I had the same issue with a Sandisk 128GB Extreme UHS i card but not with any of the other Sandisk 32GB Extreme UHS i cards I’ve tried.

I have replaced the Lexar card with a Sandisk 64GB UHS ii card and this card has not had a problem so far.

 
CANON EOS R5 + 400mm F2.8 L IS USM

CANON EOS R5 + 400mm F2.8 L IS USM

 

Stills Image Quality on the EOS R5

Stills image quality on the R5 is superb and I don’t believe I am seeing the best of it yet either because Adobe does not fully support CR3 camera profiles.

Conversion to DNG or the use of Adobe Standard profile, loses quite a lot of colour resolution compared to the same image viewed in Canon DPP software. The images also appear noisy in Adobe software.

Although, it may be that Canon DPP is applying noise reduction, or responding to file instructions from the camera. I am not sure.

At the moment I am making it a rule to shoot JPEG alongside the Canon CR3 RAW files so that I have a reference image including the Canon Picture Profile. I hope these will make it easier to edit back to the expected outcome using Adobe software. That is until Adobe releases the camera profiles at least.

Image Comparison with 7D Mark ii

Methodology

Both cameras were shot in bright clear midday light using a fixed target. I used centre point exposure metering and then cycled the shutter speed to under and over expose the target.

The cameras were shot with Sunny white balance, ALL adjustments in Adobe Lightroom have been removed. No lens profile adjustments were applied. I have used the Adobe Color profile for all shots because CR3 profiles are not supported.

I shot a range of shots at ISO100 and ISO400 (to simulate conditions most common in wildlife photography).

I have resized the Canon R5 image to match the 7D

I also shot the R5 with uncompressed and compressed RAW. I see almost no difference between these formats.

Shadow Recovery - 7D Mark ii vs R5 vs 5D mark iii

Note the Canon 7D Mark ii offers slightly better pixels on subject (resolution) than the R5.

Canon 7D Mark ii - ISO400 F8 1/8000 - 1000x1000 pixel 100 percent crop

Canon 7D Mark ii - ISO400 F8 1/8000 - 1000x1000 pixel 100 percent crop

Canon R5 ISO400 F8 1/8000 - 1000x1000 Pixels 100% Crop

Canon R5 ISO400 F8 1/8000 - 1000x1000 Pixels 100% Crop

Canon 7D Mark ii - ISO400 F8 1/8000 + 5 stops exposure correction in post - 1000x1000 pixel 100 percent crop

Canon 7D Mark ii - ISO400 F8 1/8000 + 5 stops exposure correction in post - 1000x1000 pixel 100 percent crop

Canon R5 - ISO400 F8 1/8000 + 5 stops exposure correction in post - 1000x1000 pixel 100 percent crop

Canon R5 - ISO400 F8 1/8000 + 5 stops exposure correction in post - 1000x1000 pixel 100 percent crop

Canon R5 Compressed RAW - ISO400 F8 1/8000 + 5 stops exposure correction in post - 1000x1000 pixel 100 percent crop

Canon R5 Compressed RAW - ISO400 F8 1/8000 + 5 stops exposure correction in post - 1000x1000 pixel 100 percent crop

Canon 5D mark iii - ISO400 F8 1/8000 + 5 stops exposure correction in post - 1000x1000 pixel 100 percent crop

Canon 5D mark iii - ISO400 F8 1/8000 + 5 stops exposure correction in post - 1000x1000 pixel 100 percent crop

Highlight Recovery - 7D Mark ii vs R5 vs 5D mark iii

Canon 7D Mark ii - 3 stop exposure correction in post - ISO400 F8 1/400 - 1000x1000pixel 100% crop

Canon 7D Mark ii - 3 stop exposure correction in post - ISO400 F8 1/400 - 1000x1000pixel 100% crop

Canon R5 compressed RAW - 3 stop exposure correction in post - ISO400 F8 1/400 - 1000x1000pixel 100% crop

Canon R5 compressed RAW - 3 stop exposure correction in post - ISO400 F8 1/400 - 1000x1000pixel 100% crop

Canon R5 RAW - 3 stop exposure correction in post - ISO400 F8 1/400 - 1000x1000pixel 100% crop

Canon R5 RAW - 3 stop exposure correction in post - ISO400 F8 1/400 - 1000x1000pixel 100% crop

Canon 5D Mark iii - 3 stop exposure correction in post - ISO400 F8 1/400 - 1000x1000pixel 100% crop

Canon 5D Mark iii - 3 stop exposure correction in post - ISO400 F8 1/400 - 1000x1000pixel 100% crop

Dynamic Range Comparison

It is obvious from the examples above that the Canon R5 has better dynamic range than both the 7D mark ii and the 5D mark iii.

It is clear that the highlight recovery is better and that noise is more closely controlled. Additionally, colour noise is better in the R5 although this may also be an artefact of processing the partially supported files in Adobe.

Image Sharpness R5 vs 7D Mark ii

In the example below the R5 has been slightly upsized to match the 7D Mark ii. No sharpening or noise reduction or rescaling algorithms were applied.

To my eye the R5 is sharper. I should note that the Low Pass Filter in the 7D Mark ii requires sharpening in post (which has not been applied here) while the R5 has a more advanced low pass filter requiring less sharpening (also not applied).

Please note the R5 file is a Compressed RAW below.

ISO 400 F8 1/1600th @400mm cropped to 1000x1000 pixels 100% crop on 7D - resized upward on R5

ISO 400 F8 1/1600th @400mm cropped to 1000x1000 pixels 100% crop on 7D - resized upward on R5

 
 

WANT TO TAKE YOUR PHOTOGRAPHY TO THE NEXT LEVEL?

 

Specifications in detail

Image Sensor

  • Type

    36 x 24 mm CMOS

  • Effective Pixels

    Approx. 45 megapixels

  • Total Pixels

    Approx. 47.1 megapixels

  • Aspect Ratio

    3:2

  • Low-Pass Filter

    Built-in/Fixed

  • Sensor Cleaning

    EOS integrated cleaning system

  • Colour Filter Type

    Primary Colour

  • Sensor Shift-IS

    Yes, up to 8-Stops advantage depending on the lens used 1

Image Processor

  • Type

    DIGIC X

Lens

  • Lens Mount

    RF (EF and EF-S lenses can be attached using: Mount Adapter EF-EOS R Control Ring Mount Adapter EF-EOS R Drop-In Filter Mount Adapter EF-EOS R) EF-M lenses are not compatible

  • Focal Length

    Equivalent to 1.0x the focal length of the lens with RF and EF lenses 1.6x with EF-S

Focusing

  • Type

    Dual Pixel CMOS AF

  • AF System / Points

    100% horizontal and 100% vertical with Face + Tracking and Auto Selection modes 100% horizontal and 90% vertical with manual selection and large zone modes 2

  • AF Working Range

    EV -6 – 20 (at 23°C & ISO100) 3

  • AF Modes

    One Shot Servo AF AI Focus AF (in A+ Scene Intelligent Auto mode )

  • AF Point Selection

    Automatic selection: Face + tracking. 1053 Available AF areas when automatically selected Manual selection: 1-point AF (AF frame size can be changed) 5940 (stills)/ (4500) movie AF positions available Manual selection: AF point Expansion 4 points (up, down, left, right) Manual selection: AF point Expansion surrounding points Manual selection: Zone AF (all AF points divided into 9 focusing zones) Manual selection: Large Zone AF (Vertical) Manual selection: Large Zone AF (Horizontal)

  • AF Lock

    Locked when shutter button is pressed halfway or AF ON is pressed in One Shot AF mode. Using customised button set to AF stop in AI servo

  • AF Assist Beam

    Emitted by built in LED or optional dedicated Speedlite (flash)

  • Manual Focus

    Selected on lens

Exposure Control

  • Metering Modes

    Real-time with image sensor, 384-zone metering. (1) Evaluative metering (linked to All AF points) (2) Partial metering (approx. 6.1% of viewfinder at centre) (3) Spot metering: Centre spot metering (approx. 3.1% viewfinder at centre) AF point-linked spot metering not provided (4) Centre weighted average metering

  • Metering Brightness Range

    EV -3 – 20 (at 23°C, ISO100, with evaluative metering)

  • AE Lock

    Auto: AE lock takes effect when focus is achieved Manual: By AE lock button in P, Av, Fv, Tv and M modes

  • Exposure Compensation

    `+/-3 EV in 1/3 or 1/2 stop increments (can be combined with AEB)

  • AEB

    +/-3 EV in 1/3 or 1/2 stop increments

  • Anti-flicker Shooting

    Yes. Flicker detected at a frequency of 100 Hz or 120 Hz. Maximum continuous shooting speed may decrease

  • ISO Sensitivity

  • Auto 100-51,200 (in 1/3-stop or 1 stop increments) ISO can be expanded to L:50, H:102,400 4

Shutter

  • Type

    Electronically-controlled focal-plane shutter and Electronic shutter function on sensor

  • Speed

    30-1/8000 sec (1/2 or 1/3 stop increments), Bulb (Total shutter speed range. Available range varies by shooting mode)

  • Shutter Release

    Soft touch electromagnetic release

White Balance

  • Type

    Auto white balance with the imaging sensor

  • Settings

    AWB (Ambience priority/White priority), Daylight, Shade, Cloudy, Tungsten light, White Fluorescent light, Flash, Custom, Colour Temperature Setting White balance compensation: 1. Blue/Amber +/-10 2. Magenta/Green +/-10

  • WB Bracketing

    `+/-3 levels in single level increments 3, 2, 5 or 7 bracketed images per shutter release Selectable Blue/Amber bias or Magenta/Green bias

Viewfinder

  • Type

    0.5-inch OLED colour EVF

  • Dot Count

    5.76 Million dots

  • Coverage (Vertical/Horizontal)

    Approx. 100%

  • Magnification

    Approx. 0.76x 5

  • Eyepoint

    Approx. 23mm (from eyepiece lens centre)

  • Dioptre Correction

    -4 to +2 m-1 (dioptre)

  • Viewfinder Information

    Shutter speed, Aperture, ISO speed, AF point information, Exposure level indicator, Number of remaining exposures, Exposure compensation, Battery level, Electronic shutter, HDR shooting, Highlight tone priority, Multiple-exposure shooting, Dual Pixel RAW shooting, Self-timer shooting mode, Maximum burst, AF method, Exposure simulation, Drive mode, AEB, Metering mode, FEB, Anti-flicker shooting, Still/video cropping, Shooting mode, Aspect ratio, Scene icons Auto Lighting Optimizer, AE lock Picture Style, Flash-ready, White balance, FE lock, Image Quality, High-speed sync, Bluetooth function, Wi-Fi on/off, , Histogram, Electronic level, Focus distance scale in manual focus, IS system, Audio Level – Manual (video), recording time remaining (video), headphone level (video), Video recording resolution frame rate and compression (video) Rec indicator (video)

  • Depth of Field Preview

    Yes, via customised button

  • Eyepiece Shutter

    N/A

LCD Monitor

  • Type

    8cm (3.15") Clear View LCD II, approx. 2.1 million dots

  • Coverage

    Approx. 100%

  • Viewing Angle (Horizontally/Vertically)

    Approx. 170° vertically and horizontally

  • Coating

    Anti-smudge.

  • Brightness Adjustment

    Manual: Adjustable to one of seven levels Colour Tone Adjustment: 4 settings

  • Touch Screen Operations

    Capacitive method with menu functions, Quick Control settings, playback operations, and magnified display. AF point selection in still and Movies, touch shutter is possible in still photo shooting.

  • Display Options

    (1) Basic Camera settings (2) Advance Camera settings (3) Camera settings plus histogram and dual level display (4) No info (5) Quick Control Screen

Flash

  • Modes

    E-TTL II Auto Flash, Metered Manual

  • X-Sync

    1/200sec mechanical shutter / 1/250th electronic 1st curtain

  • Flash Exposure Compensation

    +/- 3EV in 1/3 or 1/2 stop increments with EX series Speedlite flashes

  • Flash Exposure Bracketing

    Yes, with compatible External Flash

  • Flash Exposure Lock

    Yes

  • Second Curtain Synchronisation

    Yes via Speedlite

  • HotShoe / PC Terminal

    Yes/No

  • External Flash Compatibility

    E-TTL II with EX series Speedlite, wireless multi-flash support

  • External Flash Control

    via camera menu screen

Shooting

  • Modes

    Stills; Scene Intelligent Auto, Flexible priority AE, Program AE, Shutter priority AE, Aperture priority AE, Manual, Bulb and Custom (x3) Movie: Auto Exposure, Manual

  • Picture Styles

    Auto, Standard, Portrait, Landscape, Fine Detail, Neutral, Faithful, Monochrome, User Defined (x3)

  • Colour Space

    sRGB and Adobe RGB

  • Image Processing

    Dual Pixel RAW – Portrait Relighting, Background Clarity ( in camera) Highlight Tone Priority (2 settings) Auto Lighting Optimizer (4 settings) Long exposure noise reduction Clarity High ISO speed noise reduction (4 settings) (stills and video) Lens optical correction - Peripheral illumination correction, Chromatic aberration correction Distortion correction (during/after still photo shooting, during video only) - Diffraction correction, Digital Lens Optimizer (during/after still photo shooting) Resize to M, S1, S2 Cropping of images (JPEG/HEIF) - Aspect ratios 3:2, 4:3, 16:9, 1:1 - Switch between vertical and horizontal cropping orientation - Image straightening - Cropping frame can be moved using touch screen operation RAW image processing Multiple exposure HDR HEIF to Jpeg conversion

  • Drive Modes

    Single, Continuous High+, Continuous High, Continuous Low, Self timer (2s+remote, 10s+remote)

  • Continuous Shooting

    Max. Approx. 12fps. with Mechanical shutter or 20fps with electronic shutter speed maintained for 350 JPEG or 180 RAW images 6

  • Interval Timer

    Built in

File Type

  • Still Image Type

    JPEG: 2 compression options RAW: RAW, C-RAW 14 bit (14-bit with Mechanical shutter and Electronic 1st Curtain, 13-bit A/D conversion with H+ mode, 12-bit A/D conversion with Electronic shutter, Canon original RAW 3rd edition) HEIF: 10bit HEIF is available in HDR shooting with [HDR PQ] set to [Enable] Complies with Exif 2.31 and Design rule for Camera File system 2.0 Complies with Digital Print Order Format [DPOF] Version 1.1

  • RAW+JPEG Simultaneous Recording

    Yes, any combination of RAW + JPEG or RAW + HEIF possible

  • Image Size

    JPEG / HEIF
    3:2 ratio (L, RAW, C-RAW) 8192x5464, (M1) 5808x3872, (S1) 4176x2784, (S2) 2400x1600
    1.6x (crop) (L) 5088x3392, (S2) 2400x1600
    4:3 ratio (L) 7280x5464, (M1) 5152x3872, (S1) 3712x2784, (S2) 2112x1600
    16:9 ratio (L) 8192x4608, (M1) 5808x3264, (S1) 4176x2344, (S2) 2400x1344
    1:1 ratio (L) 5456x5456, (M1) 3872x3872, (S1) 2784x2784, (S2) 1600x1600

  • Folders

    New folders can be manually created, named and selected

  • File Numbering

    (1) Consecutive numbering (2) Auto reset (3) Manual reset

  • File Naming

    2 User presets

EOS Movie

  • Movie Type

    MP4 Video: 8K DCI/ UHD (17:9 / 16:9) 4K DCI/ UHD (17:9 / 16:9), Full HD 7

  • Movie Size

    8K/4K/ Full HD: AVC/H.265 variable (average) bit rate, Audio: Linear PCM 4K/ Full HD: MPEG4 AVC/H.264 variable (average) bit rate, Audio: Linear PCM 8K RAW: 12bit CRM Audio: Linear PCM 8K DCI (17:9) 8192 x 4320 (29.97, 25, 24, 23.98 fps) RAW, intra or inter frame 8K UHD (16:9) 7680 x 4320 (29.97, 25, , 23.98 fps) intra or inter frame 4K DCI (17:9) 4096 x 2160 (119.9, 100, 59.94, 50, 29.97, 25, 24, 23.98 fps) intra or inter frame 4K UHD (16:9) 3840 x 2160 (119.9, 100, 59.94, 50, 29.97, 25, 23.98 fps) intra or inter frame Full HD (16:9) 1920 x 1080 (59.94, 50, 29.97, 25, 23.98 fps) intra or inter frame Full HD (16:9) 1920 x 1080 HDR (29.97, 25 fps) inter frame Full HD (16:9) 1920 x 1080 (29.97, 25) light inter frame 8 9

  • Colour Sampling (Internal Recording)

    8K/ 4K/ Full HD - YCbCr4:2:0 8-bit or YCbCr4:2:2 10bit

  • Canon Log

    Yes, Canon Log 1

  • Movie Length

    Max duration 29min 59sec. (excluding High Frame Rate movies). No 4GB file limit with exFAT formatted SD card.

  • High Frame Rate Movie

    MOV Video: 4K – DCI 4096x2160 or UHD 3840x2160 UHD at 100fps or 119.9fps (10) Recorded as 1/4-speed slow motion movie Single scene maximum recording up to 7min 29sec. 10

  • Frame Grab

    35.4-megapixel JPEG still image frame grab from 8K DCI movie possible 33.2-megapixel JPEG still image frame grab from 8K UHD movie possible 8.8-megapixel JPEG still image frame grab from 4K DCI movie possible 8.3-megapixel JPEG still image frame grab from 4K UHD movie possible (HEIF only possible when HDR PQ is set)

  • Bitrate / Mbps

    CRM: 

    8k Raw (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p/23.98p): Approx. 2600 Mbps 

    MOV: MP4 H.264 Canon Log off 

    8K ALL-I (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p*/23.98p): Approx. 1300 Mbps 

    8K IPB (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p*/23.98p): Approx. 470 Mbps 

    4K (119.9p / 100p): Approx. 1880 Mbps 

    4K (59.94p/50.00p): ALL-I Approx. 940 Mbps 

    4K (59.94p/50.00p): IPB Approx. 230 Mbps 

    4K (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p/23.98p): ALL-I Approx. 470 Mbps 

    4K (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p/23.98p): IPB Approx. 120 Mbps 

    Full HD (59.94p/50.00p)/ALL-I: Approx. 180 Mbps 

    Full HD (59.94p/50.00p)/IPB Approx. 60 Mbps 

    Full HD (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p/23.98p)/ALL-I: Approx. 90 Mbps 

    Full HD (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p/23.98p)/IPB: Approx. 30 Mbps 

    Full HD (29.97p/25.00p)/IPB (Light): Approx. 12 Mbps 

    8K Time Lapse (29.97p/25.00p) ALL-I: Approx. 1300 Mbps 

    4K Time Lapse (29.97p/25.00p) ALL-I: Approx. 470 Mbps 

    Full HD Time Lapse (29.97p/25.00p) ALL-I: Approx. 90 Mbps 

    MOV: MP4 H.265 Canon Log on 

    8K ALL-I (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p*/23.98p): Approx. 1300 Mbps 

    8K IPB (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p*/23.98p): Approx. 680 Mbps 

    4K (119.9p / 100p): Approx. 1880 Mbps 

    4K (59.94p/50.00p): ALL-I Approx. 1000 Mbps 

    4K (59.94p/50.00p): IPB Approx. 340 Mbps 

    4K (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p/23.98p): ALL-I Approx. 470 Mbps 

    4K (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p/23.98p): IPB Approx. 170 Mbps 

    Full HD (59.94p/50.00p)/ALL-I: Approx. 230 Mbps 

    Full HD (59.94p/50.00p)/IPB Approx. 90 Mbps 

    Full HD (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p/23.98p)/ALL-I: Approx. 135 Mbps 

    Full HD (29.97p/25.00p/24.00p/23.98p)/IPB: Approx. 45 Mbps 

    Full HD (29.97p/25.00p)/IPB (Light): Approx. 28 Mbps 

    8K Time Lapse (29.97p/25.00p) ALL-I: Approx. 1300 Mbps 

    4K Time Lapse (29.97p/25.00p) ALL-I: Approx. 470 Mbps 

    Full HD Time Lapse (29.97p/25.00p) ALL-I: Approx. 135 Mbps 11

  • Microphone

    Built-in mono microphone (48 Khz, 16-bit x 2 channels)

  • HDMI Display

    Output to external monitor only (output of images and shooting information, images are recorded to the card) Camera screen and External Monitor output ( Simultaneous recording to camera and external recorder, camera screen shows images with shooting information)

  • HDMI Output

    4K (DCI) 59.94p / 50.00p/29.97p /25.00p/24.00p/ 23.98p, 4K (UHD) 59.94p / 50.00p/ 29.97p / 25.00p / 23.98p, Full HD 59.94p / 59.94i, 50.00p / 50.00i 480p 59.94p 576p 50p Uncompressed YCbCr 4:2:2, 8-bit or 10-bit, sound output via HDMI is also possible

  • Focusing

    Dual Pixel CMOS AF with Eye/Face Detection and Animal Tracking AF, Movie Servo AF Manual Focus (Peaking and Focus Guide available)

  • ISO

    Auto: 100-6400, H: 51200 Manual: 100-25600, H1: 51200

Other Features

  • Custom Functions

    23 Custom Functions

  • Metadata Tag

    User copyright information (can be set in camera) Image rating (0-5 stars) IPTC data (registered with EOS Utility) Image transfer with caption (Caption registered with EOS Utility)

  • LCD Panel / Illumination

    Yes/Yes

  • Water/Dust Resistance

    Yes 12

  • Voice Memo

    Yes

  • Intelligent Orientation Sensor

    Yes

  • Playback Zoom

    1.5x - 10x in 15 steps

  • Display Formats

    (1) Single image (2) Single image with information (2 levels) Basic - Shooting information (shutter speed, aperture, ISO and Image quality) Detailed - Shooting information (shutter speed, aperture, ISO, metering Image, quality and file size), Lens information, Brightness and RGB histogram, White balance, Picture Style, Color space and noise reduction, Lens optical correction, GPS information, IPTC information (3) 4 image index (4) 9 image index (5) 36 image index (6) 100 image index (7) Jump Display (1, 10 or 100 images, Date, Folder, Movies, Stills, Protected images, Rating) (8) Movie edit (9) RAW processing (10) Rating

  • SlideShow

    Image selection: All images, by Date, by Folder, Movies, Stills, Protected images or Rating Playback time: 1/2/3/5/10 or 20 seconds Repeat: On/Off

  • Histogram

    Brightness: Yes RGB: Yes

  • Highlight Alert

    Yes

  • Image Erase

    Single image, select range, Selected images, Folder, Card

  • Image Erase Protection

    Erase protection of Single image, Folder or Card all found images (only during image search)

  • Self Timer

    3 or 10 sec.

  • Menu Categories

    (1) Shooting menu (2) AF Menu (3) Playback menu (4) Network (5) Setup menu (6) Custom Functions menu (7) My Menu

  • Menu Languages

    29 Languages English, German, French, Dutch, Danish, Portuguese, Finnish, Italian, Norwegian, Swedish, Spanish, Greek, Russian, Polish, Czech, Hungarian, Vietnamese, Hindi, Romanian, Ukrainian, Turkish, Arabic, Thai, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Korean, Malay, Indonesia and Japanese

  • Firmware Update

    Update possible by the user (Camera, Lens, External Speedlite, BLE remote control, Lens adapter)

Interface

  • Computer

    SuperSpeed USB 3.1 Gen 2 USB C connector

  • Wi-Fi

    Wireless LAN (IEEE802.11a/b/g/n/ac) (2.4 GHz) 13, with Bluetooth 4.2 support, Features supported - EOS Utility, Smartphone, Upload to image.canon, Wireless printing

  • Other

    HDMI micro out (Type D), External Microphone In/Line In (Stereo mini jack), Headphone socket (Stereo mini jack), N3-type terminal (remote control terminal) Flash sync socket

Direct Print

  • PictBridge

    Not supported

Storage

  • Type

    1x CFexpress type B, 1x SD/SDHC/SDXC and UHS-II

Supported Operating System

  • PC

    Windows 8.1 and Windows 10 (tablet mode not supported)

  • Macintosh

    OS X v10.12, 10.13, 10.14, 10.15

Software

  • Image Processing

    Digital Photo Professional 4.12.4 or later, Digital Photo Professional Express mobile app ( iPad only ) (RAW Image Processing)

  • Other

    EOS Utility 3.12.3 or later (incl. Remote Capture), Picture Style Editor, EOS Lens Registration Tool, EOS Web Service Registration Tool, Canon Camera Connect app, Mobile File Transfer app and image.canon app (iOS/Android)

Power Source

  • Batteries

    Rechargeable Li-ion Battery LP-E6NH (supplied)/LP-E6N

  • Battery Life

    With LCD Approx. 490 shots (at 23°C) With LCD Approx. 470 (at 0°C) With Viewfinder Approx. 320 shots (at 23°C) 14 With Viewfinder Approx. 310 (at 0°C)

  • Battery Indicator

    6 levels + percentage

  • Power Saving

    Power turns off after 30 seconds, 1, 3, 5, 10 or 30mins

  • Power Supply & Battery Chargers

    Battery charger LC-E6E (supplied), AC Adapter AC-E6N and DC Coupler DR-E6, AC Adapter Kit ACK-E6N/ACK-E6, Car Battery Charger CBC-E6, PD-E1 USB power adapter

Accessories

  • Wireless File Transmitter

    Wireless File Transmitter WFT-E10B

  • Lenses

    All RF lenses (EF & EF-S via Lens adapters)

  • Lens Adapters

    Mount Adapter EF-EOS R Control Ring Mount Adapter EF-EOS R Drop-In Filter Mount Adapter EF-EOS R

  • Flash

    Canon Speedlite (EL-100, 90EX, 220EX, 270EX, 270EX II, 320EX, 380EX, 420EX, 430EX, 430EX II, 430EX III-RT, 470EX-AI, 550EX, 580EX, 580EX II, 600EX, 600EX-RT, 600EX II-RT, Macro-Ring-Lite MR-14EX, Macro Ring Lite MR-14EX II, Macro Twin Lite MT-24EX, Macro Twin Lite MT-26EX Speedlite Transmitter ST-E2, Speedlite Transmitter ST-E3-RT)

  • Remote Controller / Switch

    Remote control with N3 type socket, Wireless Remote Control BR-E1, Infrared Remote RC-6 and Speedlite 600EX-II-RT

  • Other

    BG-R10 battery grip, GP-E2 GPS receiver (digital compass not supported), Stereo Microphone DM-E1 / DM-E100

Physical Specifications

  • Body Materials

    Magnesium Alloy body and Chassis with some components consisting of polycarbonate with glass fibre

  • Operating Environment

    1 – 40 °C, 85% or less humidity

  • Dimensions (W x H x D)

    138.5 x 97.5 x 88mm

  • Weight (Body Only)

    Approx. 650 g (738 g with card and battery)

 
 
Will Goodlet

Will Goodlet is a landscape and wildlife photographer focused on Southern Africa.

http://willgoodlet.com
Next
Next

Is the Canon M50 a good camera for wildlife photography?