1. Canon EOS R3. The Ultimate Professional Canon Camera, Incredibly High-Performing. When getting the shot is imperative, the extreme EOS R3 is the camera to pick up. While the R3's 24 MP resolution is not high for a full-frame camera, the quality of those pixels is so high that it outperforms higher resolution models. The Canon EOS-1D X Mark III will reportedly use a brand new Digic 9 processor – a pair of them, in fact (Image credit: Canon). While the big takeaway at first glance is the relatively modest 28.1MP sensor, it's important to remember that a larger sensor isn't the reason that the target audience – working professionals – are going to want this camera.
30.4-megapixel full frame CMOS sensor; DIGIC 6+ image processor; The 2016 EOS 5D Mark IV was not the "last-of-the-line" DSLR from Canon. The 1D X Mark III released in 2020, four years after
By dropping resolution on its full-frame CMOS sensor to 18-megapixels (a compromise between the 1D Mark IV’s 16.1-megapixel APS-H sized sensor and the 1Ds Mark III’s 21.1-megapixel full-frame sensor), not to mention its new Dual Digic 5+ processors, the 1D X is able to shoot at even faster rates than the speedy 1D Mark IV—12 fps As you can see in the photos in Eduardo's video, the image quality looks good. While dynamic range testing by Photons to Photos shows the original EOS-1D as topping out at 7.72 stops of dynamic range, compared to the EOS-1D X III at 11.25, in real-world images, the 1D's photos look good. Granted, they likely don't hold up well at large sizes The Canon Eos 1DX contains a full-frame, 18.1MP CMOS sensor that features pixels that are 1.25 microns larger than the pixels found in Canon's EOS-1D Mark IV, and 0.55 microns larger than the pixels found in Canons EOS-5D Mk II, which combined with gapless micro lenses, should translate into greater dynamic range, less noise and smoother shadow

See full specifications. Canon EOS-1D Mark II 8.2MP Digital SLR Camera (Body Only) Pentax K-3 Mark III Monochrome. Pentax WG-90. Sony a6700.

At a summary level: Stuff a Canon EOS-1D X into a 7D-sized APS-C body with an APS-C-sized sensor, add a few enhancements (and remove a few), cut the price by 74% (as of review time) and you get a 7D Mark II. This camera is a bargain-priced, professional-duty-ready DSLR waiting to tackle your world.
While rumors and wishful thinking pointed to a full-frame sensor on the next ‘sports 1D’, the EOS 1D Mark IV announcement today confirmed that Canon still wants to keep the APS-H crop sensors – the camera has a APS-H sensor with 1.3X crop factor, which means a 50 mm lens will become equivalent to 65 mm in 35 mm terms.
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  • canon 1d mark iii full frame