Canon not only introduced the DSLR EOS 90D at the same time as its mirrorless cousin, the EOS M6 Mark II, both cameras also share the technical basis.The APS-C sensor with 32.5 megapixels, for example, or the "DIGIC 8" image processor.The whole thing is garnished with typical DSLR ingredients such as an optical viewfinder or the voluminous, non-slip housing.Does this make the EOS 90D the perfect DSLR alternative?I've tried it in difficult times.Burst rate with AF-C: 10 fps (OVF), 7 fps (EVF)Dual Pixel CMOS AF with Eye and Face Detection (EVF)Optical viewfinder with 100% coverage, magnification: 0.59x (based on KB)The mirrorless Canon EOS M6 Mark II made a lasting impression on me.No other APS-C camera currently offers such high resolution.no other?But: with the EOS 90D, Canon has another model on offer that is based on the same technical basis as the EOS M6 Mark II. The same half-format sensor with 32.5 megapixels and dual-pixel autofocus.The same DIGIC 8 image processor that, among other things, ensures a rapid continuous shooting speed.As much as the EOS 90D and EOS M6 Mark II may be similar under the hood, they are fundamentally different on the outside and in principle.The EOS 90D is a classic DSLR with an optical viewfinder and a large, non-slip body.The EOS 90D offers a lot in Live View mode that a traditional SLR camera cannot.After working intensively with the EOS M6 Mark II, it was obvious to me: I also want to take a closer look and try out the EOS 90D.Actually not a big deal - if the exit and contact restrictions as a result of the corona pandemic had not intervened.Anyone like me who hasn't had a DSLR in their hands for a long time will have to get used to the bulky and bulky nature of the EOS 90D.Measured against the DSLR principle, it is quite lightweight and compact at 700 grams - but by far not as light and small as its mirrorless cousin.The Canon EOS 90D feels good in the hand.The housing offers a lot of support, and the camera can be handled safely even with heavy lenses.The Canon EOS 90D feels good in the hand.The housing offers a lot of support, and the camera can be handled safely even with heavy lenses.However, this does not have to be a disadvantage.The EOS 90D sits firmly and securely in your hand, thanks in particular to its strong hand grip.No comparison to the EOS M6 Mark II, which can score in the photo bag with its slim dimensions - but not in use if you are using a lens like an EF 70-200m F/2.8 L III (weight: almost 1.5 kilos ) is equipped.Another advantage of the more voluminous DSLR housing: There is space for controls and an informative secondary display on the right shoulder of the camera.A new addition to the EOS 90D is a practical joystick.Together with the touch-sensitive touch display and the non-slip dials, every photographer should be able to find the operating option that suits him best.Canon has provided the EOS 90D with a wealth of controls.Great that there is also a joystick, for example for AF field selection.Canon has provided the EOS 90D with a wealth of controls.Great that there is also a joystick, for example for AF field selection.However, what I find a bit confusing are the menus of the EOS 90D.Mainly because the main menu presents different content depending on whether the Live View button was pressed or not.Unlike its little cousin, the EOS 90D is equipped with a rotating and folding display that can be viewed from almost any camera position.The camera also has a practical flash on board.Not to be forgotten: As a DSLR, the EOS 90D comes with an optical viewfinder.However, it is not particularly large (viewfinder magnification: 0.59x in relation to 35mm) and should also be a bit brighter for my taste.After all, the viewfinder covers 100 percent of the image field and is quite informative for a DSLR.However, none of this can hide the fact that the electronic viewfinders of today's mirrorless cameras are significantly larger (including those of half-format cameras) and can display significantly more information.The display of the EOS 90D can be rotated and folded very freely.Among other things, this makes shooting close to the ground much easier.The display of the EOS 90D can be rotated and folded very freely.Among other things, this makes shooting close to the ground much easier.The EOS 90D impresses with a wide range of functions.And not only for demanding photographers, but also for beginners and those who are up and coming.In addition to the green carefree automatic, there are a dozen freely selectable motif programs for less experienced users.They can even be overridden, for example by exposure correction.Canon even thought of a program for followers.However, I missed a stabilized sensor.With the EOS 90D, there is only additional security against blurred shots if the camera is equipped with a stabilized lens.However, Canon does not offer an optical stabilizer with every lens - especially with fixed focal lengths, the abbreviation IS for "Image Stabilization" is often missing in the lens designation.Canon has equipped the EOS 90D with a decent on-board flash (LZ 12).Canon has equipped the EOS 90D with a decent on-board flash (LZ 12).Incidentally, Canon does not follow the trend towards a second card slot with the EOS 90D, the camera only has to make do with one SD card slot.Typical for a DSLR is the large battery of the EOS 90D.It provides energy for around 1300 shots (measured according to the CIPA standard and exclusively with an optical viewfinder), three times more than the smaller battery in the EOS M6 Mark II. Class also that Canon includes a proper charging cradle with the EOS 90D.Nevertheless, I would have wished that the battery could alternatively be charged via USB in the camera.The body of the EOS 90D consists of products from the petrochemical industry.It looks very solid to me, and the desire for a light metal housing hardly arises.Canon has properly sealed the camera against moisture, dust and splashing water.The (plentiful) interfaces protect flimsy rubber flaps - I prefer massive flaps attached with spring hinges.Incidentally, the body of the EOS 90D is so similar to that of its predecessor, the EOS 80D, that the BG-14 battery grip also fits on the new camera.For a long time it was true that anyone who needs fast autofocus, for example for sports and action photos, is better served with a DSLR than with a mirrorless one.Can the EOS 90D confirm this old adage?Is your autofocus faster in viewfinder mode, maybe even more reliable than in live view mode?I tried out the Canon EOS 90D with the EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM NANO kit lens (on the left of the camera) and the EF 70-200mm f/4L IS III USM telephoto zoom (on the right).The latter was used for the autofocus test.I tried out the Canon EOS 90D with the EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM NANO kit lens (on the left of the camera) and the EF 70-200mm f/4L IS III USM telephoto zoom (on the right).The latter was used for the autofocus test.Canon has improved the classic phase comparison AF on the EOS 90D compared to the EOS 80D.Not with the number of sensors - there it remains at 45 cross sensors, which are relatively close to the center of the image.But the AF system benefits from the new exposure sensor, which now has a resolution of 220,000 pixels.Enough for the EOS 90D to be able to detect and focus on faces even in viewfinder mode.Completely independent of this there is a second AF system in live mode.It is identical to the AF system of the EOS M6 Mark II. It is based on more than 5000 dual-pixel phase comparison sensors directly on the image converter.They cover about 90 percent of the image field in height and 100 percent in width.With almost static subjects, the EOS 90D impresses with its fast, accurate autofocus - both in the viewfinder and in Live View mode.With almost static subjects, the EOS 90D impresses with its fast, accurate autofocus - both in the viewfinder and in Live View mode.As usual, Janna, the editorial dog, has to fetch toys for the autofocus test.Not an easy task for a camera's AF system: Janna usually sprints towards the camera at a remarkable pace in anticipation of her treat.First, the EOS 90D has to show what its AF system can do in viewfinder mode.The first difficulty is that the camera offers so many options for autofocus that it takes me a while to set all the parameters to my liking.What's important to me is that the camera should only trigger when it's perfectly focused - focus accuracy is more important to me than continuous shooting speed.The second problem then becomes apparent in practice: the AF area in the viewfinder image is really small – not that easy to always keep Janna close to the center of the viewfinder.But after a few attempts it works quite well.However, the camera does not keep to the specified continuous shooting rate of 10 frames/second - but well, I also prioritized sharpness.A typical result: At first glance, everything looks OK.But the 100% view (click on the picture) shows: The focus is on the rear.[200mm, F/4.5, 1/1000s, ISO 200] However, the result is not quite what I expected.Surprisingly often the EOS 90D focused on Janna's buttocks rather than her head.I would describe about half of the shots as just about usable, maybe 20 percent are perfectly sharp.A typical result: At first glance, everything looks OK.But the 100% view (click on the picture) shows: The focus is on the rear.[200mm, F/4.5, 1/1000s, ISO 200]But it might work better in Live View mode.Here, the serial frame rate is limited to 7 frames/second from the outset.And indeed, the yield of perfectly sharp action photos is slightly larger in Live View mode.About half is how I want it now.The tracking, which is clearly reliable in Live View mode, obviously plays a major role.And certainly the fact that the EOS 90D can focus almost over the entire sensor area in Live View mode.In Live View mode, the EOS 90D surprisingly has less trouble tracking the focus at the front of the subject.(Click on the image to open a 100% section.) [102mm, F/4.5, 1/1000s, ISO 200] The result, which I found somewhat surprising: In viewfinder mode, i.e. like with a classic SLR, the AF performance of the EOS 90D behind.In Live View mode, it may not focus quite so sharply in every situation - when it comes to tracking or face and eye recognition, Live View outperforms the classic viewfinder mode.However, the mirrorless EOS M6 Mark II can do it a little better.Your AF also works a bit unfocused in tracking mode - but at least with a significantly higher serial frame rate.In Live View mode, the EOS 90D surprisingly has less trouble tracking the focus at the front of the subject.(Click on the picture opens a 100% section.) [102mm, F/4.5, 1/1000s, ISO 200]For videographers, there is little reason to reach for a DSLR instead of a mirrorless one.If, for once, you do, the EOS 90D will not disappoint you.Compared to its predecessor, it makes a big leap forward.Nominally, the video capabilities of the EOS 90D are the same as the EOS M6 Mark II: up to 4K 30p (no crop!), slow motion at 1080/120p (but no AF-C and audio recording).There are also two digital image stabilizers of different strengths – however, they crop the image field by a factor of 1.11 or 1.43.What also speaks for the EOS 90D as a video camera: the large variety of suitable EF-S lenses.Incidentally, this is by no means a makeshift, especially not when it comes to autofocus.When it's not about keeping fast-moving subjects in focus, the EOS 90D will focus quickly and without pumping when shooting video.Practical for vloggers: the display can be folded and rotated so that you can use it as a control monitor when looking at the camera.Canon has also thought of connections for microphone and headphones.The same 32.5-megapixel sensor as the EOS M6 Mark II, the same DIGIC 8 processor - the image quality of the EOS 90D will not differ greatly from that of its mirrorless sister.And indeed, for me there were no visible differences.The EOS 90D masters demanding tasks such as a studio shoot here (before the Corona outbreak) – as long as there is sufficient light for the lowest possible ISO value.[Zeiss Milvus 50mm @F/2.8]On the plus side, the EOS 90D has its very high resolution, by far the highest currently available on a half-frame camera.Despite the small pixel pitch (3.2 µm), it is surprisingly resistant to image noise.Up to around ISO 800, Lightroom shows practically no noise in the raw files.With increasing ISO values, salt and pepper noise becomes increasingly visible, but it always remains very fine and up to about ISO 6400 also quite unobtrusive.At even higher ISO values, the brightness noise becomes more and more aggressive and details are lost.The EOS 90D masters demanding tasks such as a studio shoot here (before the Corona outbreak) – as long as there is sufficient light for the lowest possible ISO value.[Zeiss Milvus 50mm @F/2.8]Even at ISO 100, the raw data I developed in Lightroom (left) show significantly more detail than the JEPGs baked in the EOS 90D (right).Even at ISO 100, the raw data I developed in Lightroom (left) show significantly more detail than the JEPGs baked in the EOS 90D (right).On the target side – as with the EOS M6 Mark II – there are JPEGs that appear flat and lack detail.This is probably only partly due to the EOS 90D's hard-hitting noise reduction - the problem increases as the ISO number rises.There is also speculation that Canon may have over-designed the EOS 90D's low-pass filter.If you want to exploit the full potential of the EOS 90D, you should record in raw format.Measured by the resolution and the low pixel pitch, the EOS 90D still delivers a pleasing number of details at ISO 6400 with a noise that is still tolerable.However, only with careful development of the raw data (left) - the JEPGs directly from the camera appear clearly washed out (right).Measured by the resolution and the low pixel pitch, the EOS 90D still delivers a pleasing number of details at ISO 6400 with a noise that is still tolerable.However, only with careful development of the raw data (left) - the JEPGs directly from the camera appear clearly washed out (right).DSLR or Mirrorless, EOS 90D or EOS M6 Mark II?With the EOS 90D, Canon has first of all thrown all the advantages of a DSLR into the balance: a non-slip body, a decent optical viewfinder, a long battery life and, of course, the immense range of suitable EF lenses.However, the EOS 90D showed me surprisingly clearly with the tracking autofocus that mirrorless has now overtaken the classic DSLR concept.But the EOS 90D also has much of a mirrorless feel like the EOS M6 Mark II - once you switch it to Live View mode.Then it convinces with a good (but not yet perfect) tracking AF, offers face and eye recognition and benefits from itSo if you are looking for the advantages of both concepts in one camera, the EOS 90D is not a bad choice.Especially since it scores with a very good image quality (when recording in raw format) and also cuts a fine figure as a video camera.very good image quality (when recording in RAW)successful synthesis of DSLR and mirrorlessClick the button below to load the content from ws-eu.amazon-adsystem.com.load contentClick the button below to load the content from ws-eu.amazon-adsystem.com.Click the button below to load the content from ws-eu.amazon-adsystem.com.load contentClick the button below to load the content from ws-eu.amazon-adsystem.com.Click the button below to load the content from ws-eu.amazon-adsystem.com.load contentClick the button below to load the content from ws-eu.amazon-adsystem.com.IMAGE SENSOR TypeAPS-C CMOS Effective PixelsApprox.32.5 megapixels Total Pixels Approx.34.4 megapixels Aspect Ratio07.01.1900 00:00 Sensor CleaningEOS integrated cleaning system Color Filter TypePrimary Color IMAGE PROCESSOR TypeDIGIC 8 LENS Lens MountEF/EF-S Focal LengthEquivalent to 1.6x the focal length of the lens FOCUSING MethodDual Pixel CMOS AF AF System/ Points45 cross -type AF points AF working rangeEV -3 – 18 (at 23°C & ISO100) AF ModesSpot AF 1-Point AF Zone AF Large Zone AF Face Priority AF AI Focus One Shot AI Servo Movie Servo AF Continuous AF Eye Detection AF AF areaHorizontal : approx.88% Vertical: approx.100% AF LockLocked when shutter button is pressed half way AF Assist BeamIntermittent firing of built-in flash or emitted by optional dedicated Speedlite AF MicroadjustmentAdjust all lenses by same amount Adjust by lens Manual FocusSelected on lens EXPOSURE CONTROL Metering modesViewfinder shooting: Approx 220,000 pixels RGB +IR metering sensor 216-zone (18×12) TTL full-aperture metering Live View shooting and Move recording: 384-zone metering with image sensor Metering RangeEV 1-20 (optical viewfinder) EV -2 – 20 (Live View) EV 0 – 20 (Movie recording) AE LockAuto: In One-shot AF mode with evaluative metering exposure is locked when focus is achieved.Manual: By AE lock button in P, TV, AV and M mode.Exposure Compensation +/-5 EV in 1/3 or 1/2 stop increments (viewfinder) +/-3 EV in 1/3 or 1/2 stop increments (Live View/ Movie) AEB+/-3 EV 1/3 or 1 /2 stop increments ISO Sensitivity (8)Auto (100-12800min / 100-25600 max) in 1-stop increments.Manual (100-25600) in 1/3-stop increments, expanded to 51200 equivalent.Minimum limit may change depending on the lens SHUTTER TypeVertical-travel mechanical focal-plane shutter, electronically controlled at all speeds SpeedCreative Zone: 1/16000 – 30 sec, bulb Basic Zone: 1/8000 – 1 sec Available range varies by shooting mode WHITE BALANCE TypeAuto white balance with the imaging sensor SettingsAWB (Ambience priority, White priority), Daylight, Shade, Cloudy, Tungsten light, White Fluorescent light, Flash, Custom, Color Temperature Setting.White balance compensation: 1. Blue/Amber +/-9.Magenta/ Green +/-9 Custom White BalanceYes, 1 setting can be registered WB Bracketing+/-3 levels in single level increments VIEWFINDER TypePentaprism Coverage (Vertical/Horizontal)Approx.100% Magnification Approx.0.95x (4) Eyepoint Approx.22mm (from eyepiece lens centre) Dioptre Correction-3 to +1 m-1 (dioptre) Focusing ScreenFixed MirrorQuick-return half mirror Viewfinder InformationAF information: AF points, focus confirmation, AF area selection modeExposure information: Shutter speed, aperture value, ISO speed (always displayed), AE lock, exposure level/compensation, spot metering circle, exposure warning, AEB.Flash information: Flash ready, high-speed sync, FE lock, flash exposure compensation, red-eye reduction light.Image information: Card information, maximum burst (2 digit display), Highlight tone priority (D+).Composition information: Grid, Electronic level, Aspect RatioOther information: Battery check, Alert symbol, Flicker Detection Depth of field previewYes, with Depth of Field preview button.Eyepiece shutterNone.Eyepiece cover attached to strap LCD MONITOR TypeTouch screen vari angle 7.7cm (3.0″) 3:2 Clear View II TFT, approx.1040K dots Coverage Approx.100% Viewing Angle (horizontally/vertically) Approx.170° CoatingAnti smudge Brightness AdjustmentAdjustable to one of seven levels Touch Screen OperationsTouch Shutter Touchscreen sensitivity Beep FLASH TypeManual pop-up retractable flash in the pentaprism housing Guide numberApprox 12/39.4 (ISO100 m/feet) Flash coverageApprox.17mm focal length/angle of view Flash exposure compensation+/- 3 stops in 1/3 or ½ stop increments.It is available using either built-in flash on the side of the camera or an external flash unit.Built-in Flash recycle timeApprox.3 seconds ModesAuto, Manual flash, Integrated Speedlite Transmitter Color temperatureEquivalent to daylight Red eye reductionUsing the red eye reduction lamp FE lock flash meteringSupported Flash sync speedMax 1/250 sec Slow synchro1/250 – 30 sec (auto) 1/250 – 1/60 sec (auto 1/250 sec (fixed) External Flash CompatibilityE-TTL II with EX series Speedlites, wireless multi-flash support E-TTL II flash meteringEvaluative (Face Priority) Evaluative Average SHOOTING ModesScene Intelligent Auto (Stills and Movie), SCN ( Portrait, Group Photo, Landscape, Close-up, Sports, Night Portrait, Handheld Night Scene, HDR Backlight Control, Food, Kids, Candlelight, Panning), HDR movies, Creative filters, Program AE, Shutter priority AE, Aperture priority AE, Manual (Stills and Movie), Bulb, Custom Picture StylesAuto, Standard, Portrait, Landscape, Fine Detail, Neutral, Faithful, Monochrome, User Defined (x3) Color SpaceSelectable between sRGB and Adobe RGB Image ProcessingHighlight Tone Priority (Disable/Enable/Enhanced) Auto Lighting Optimizer (4 settings) Long exposure noise reduction High ISO speed noise reduction (4 settings) Multi Shot Noise Reduction Auto Correction of Lens Peripheral illumination and Chromatic aberration correction Diffraction correction Digital Lens Optimizer Creative filters (Grainy B /W, Soft focus, Fish-eye effect, Water painting effect, Toy camera effect, Miniature effect, HDR x 4) RAW image processing (Brightness adjustment, White balance, Picture Style, ALO, High ISO speed NR, image quality, Colour space, Lens aberration correction.) Drive modesSingle, Continuous L, Continuous H, Continuous Shooting Panning, Silent Single Shooting, Self timer (2s+remote, 10s +remote, Continuous) Continuous ShootingOne shot: Max approx.10 fps (viewfinder) / 11 fps (live view) Servo: Max approx.10 fps (viewfinder) / 11 fps (live view) LIVE VIEW MODE TypeElectronic viewfinder with image sensor CoverageApprox.100% Frame Rate30 fps FocusingManual Focus (Magnify the image 5x or 10x at any point on screen)Autofocus: Dual Pixel CMOS AF (Face detection and Tracking AF, FlexiZone-Multi, FlexiZone-Single), Tracking sensitivity (-3 to +3 ) and Movie Servo AF Speed (-7 to +2) MeteringReal-time evaluative metering with image sensor.Evaluative metering, partial metering, spot metering, center-weighted average metering.Display OptionsBasic, Detailed, On-screen buttons, Histogram, Electronic level FILE TYPE Still Image TypeJPEG: (Exif 2.31 compliant) RAW: RAW (14bit, Canon original RAW CR3), RAW+JPEG simultaneous recordingRAW/C-RAW and JPEG simultaneous image recording quality is supported.Image SizeJPEG 3:2: (L) 6960x4640, (M) 4800x3200, (S1) 3472x2320, (S2) 2400x1600, (RAW/CRAW) 6960x4640 JPEG 4:3: (L) 6160x4640, (M) 4256x3200, (S1) 3072x2320, (S2) 2112x1600, (RAW/CRAW) 6960x4640 JPEG 16:9: (L) 6960x3904, (M) 4800x 2688, (S1) 3472×1952, (S2) 2400×1344, (RAW/CRAW) 6960×4640 JPEG 1:1: (L) 4646×4646, (M) 3200×3200, (S1) 2320×2320, (S2) 1600×1600, (RAW/CRAW) 6960 x 4640 Movie TypeMP4 MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 (variable averaged bit rate) Audio: AAC/Linea PCM Movie Size4K (3840 x 2160) Uncropped/Cropped 29.97 fps Full HD (1920 x 1080) 119.88 fps HD (1280 x 720) 59.94 fps HDR (1920 x 1080) 29.97 fps Movie LengthMax duration 29min 59sec, Max file size 4GB (If file size exceeds 4GB a new file will be created automatically) OTHER FEATURES Custom Functions29 Custom Functions Water / Dust resistanceYes Playback zoom1.5x – 10x HistogramBrightness: Yes RGB: Yes Image Erase/ProtectionErase: Single image, All images in folder, All images on card Protection: 6 options Menu Languages29 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, Indonesian and Japanese Firmware UpdateUpdate possible by the user.INTERFACE ComputerHi-Speed USB OtherVideo output (PAL/ NTSC) (integrated with USB terminal), HDMI mini output (Typce C only, CEC not supported), External microphone (3.5mm Stereo mini jack), Headphone socket (Stereo mini jack) DIRECT PRINT Canon PrintersCanon Compact Photo Printers and PIXMA Printers supporting PictBridge PictBridgeYes STORAGE TypeSD, SDHC or SDXC (UHS-II) card SUPPORTED OPERATING SYSTEMS PC & MacintoshWindows 10 / 8.1 / 8 / 7(*)* With Microsoft .NET Framework 4.5 is installed.Mac OS X 10.9, 10.10, 10.11 SOFTWARE Image ProcessingDigital Photo Professional 4.4.0 (RAW Image Processing) OtherEOS Utility Canon Camera Connect App POWER SOURCE BatteriesRechargeable Li-ion Battery LP-E6N (supplied) Battery lifeApprox.1860 (at 23°C)- Not including battery packs Battery Indicator6 levels + percentage Power savingPower turns off after 30 sec, 1, 2, 4, 8, 15min Power Supply & Battery ChargersAC Adapter AC-E6(N), DC coupler: DR-E6, Battery charger LC-E6/LC-E6E ACCESSORIES ViewfinderEyecup Eb, E-series Dioptric Adjustment Lens, Eyepiece Extender EP-EX15, Angle Finder C Wireless File TransmitterBuilt in Wi-Fi transmission GPS Receiver GP-E2, Wireless remote BR -E1, Remote Controller RC-6, Remote Switch RS-60E3, Timer Remote Controller TC-80N3, Remote Controller Adapter RA-E3 LensesAll EF and EF-S lenses FlashST-E2, ST-E3-RT, EL-100, 270EX II, 430EX III RT/ 430 EX III, 470EX-AI, 600EX II-RT, Macro Ring Lite MR-14EX II, Macro Twin Lite MT-26EX-RT BatteryBattery Park LP-E6N Battery Charger LC-E6 or LC-E6E Car Battery Cable CB-570 Care Battery Charger CBC-E6 Grip: BG-E14 OtherHand Strap E2 Battery Magazine BGM-E14L / BGM-E14A PHYSICAL SPECIFICATIONS Body MaterialsAluminum alloy and polycarbonate resin with glass fiber Operating Environment0 – 40 °C, 85% or less humidity Dimensions (WxHxD)140.7 x 104.8 x 76.8mm Weight (body only)Approx.701g (CIPA testing standard, including battery and memory card)"Never turn your hobby into a job," my grandfather once advised me.I didn't really stick to it: photography has been a favorite hobby of mine since my early youth;as a specialist journalist, she has accompanied me since I became enthusiastic about image processing software at the end of the 90s.In the summer of 2015 I took over photoscala, unfortunately my own camera has been in the closet far too often since then.Hello and a question about the 'Standard JPGs' - what do you mean by 'Standard' - the highest possible quality option that the Canon menu has to offer?This means the factory settings (Picture style) for sharpness, saturation, noise reduction, etc.if you expect good details in the JPG's Canon recommends (even with the 80D) the image style Finedetail.The standard picture style is rather suboptimal.Hello, I don't think your assessment of the tracking autofocus is meaningful.Because if the "sharpness priority" setting obviously doesn't lead to satisfactory results ("perhaps 20 percent is perfectly sharp"), I would expect that at least one alternative setting would be tried for a relevant test, in this case "release priority".In my experience, with the 90D, the hit rate with release priority is much higher in such shooting situations, as is the continuous shooting speed.Designed by Elegant Themes |Powered by WordPress