More than two years have passed since the Canon Canon EOS R6 was officially released. Foreign media have already had many speculations about the subsequent upgrade model Mark II.

Canon

Canon EOS R6 More than two years have passed since its official release. Foreign media have already had many speculations about the subsequent upgrade model Mark II. Earlier, there were rumors that the EOS R6 Mark II will use the stacked CMOS sensor with the same specification as EOS R3. As long as the Canon image processor can be adapted, it will definitely greatly improve the camera's continuous shooting ability, and may have the opportunity to become a small EOS R3 flagship camera. However, foreign media received the latest news that the specifications of EOS R6 Mark II do not seem to have changed much. The continuous shooting performance, video recording specifications, and even the memory card slot are exactly the same as the current EOS R6. It certainly disappoints the photographer.

Canon

news pointed out that the EOS R6 Mark II camera is equipped with a 24-megapixel full-frame sensor. The body supports 5-axis anti-shake, and has 12 high-speed continuous shooting per second in mechanical shutter mode. The body maintains the simple style of EOS R6, and the overall key layout is slightly adjusted, but there will basically not be too many changes. From another perspective, the control habits are consistent. As for the video specifications, the EOS R6 Mark II supports up to 4K/30fps video recording without cropping. In 1.1 times cropping mode, it can reach 4K/60fps recording specifications, and has a certain amount of slow motion upgrade space. In addition, Canon's proud Dual Pixel CMOS AF full-pixel dual-core focus system will not be absent, but it may be more refined in algorithms. There are also Canon Log 3 and HDR PQ curves, which retain picture information and leave more space for later color tuning. Unfortunately, although the EOS R6 Mark II camera supports dual-slot slots, it only supports SD memory cards, and there will be certain limitations in high-speed shooting cache. However, everything will not be settled until it is officially launched. For photographers, it is particularly important to have a suitable price.