![]() ![]() The R50 has a much more advanced auto-focus system than the R100. The EOS R50 can be used as a webcam simply by connecting it to a computer with a USB cable, whereas with the R100 you have to additionally install the EOS Webcam Utility software in order for it to be recognised. Unique to the R50 is a shooting mode called "Movie for close-up demos", which automatically focuses on anything that you hold up to the camera during recording, and then focuses back on the subject when the object is removed from the frame or moved backwards.īoth models offer Movie Digital Image Stabilisation (IS), an extra Digital IS mode called Enhanced which helps to keep handheld footage sharp. Recording time is limited to 1 hour on the R50 and 30 minutes on the R100. It also supports vertical video capture, but not live streaming. The R100 also provides 120p slow-motion recording but only at 720p resolution. The R50 offers full 1080 slow-motion recording at up to 120p with autofocus (but no sound), plus live streaming on YouTube and vertical video capture. The new R100 also offers 4K video, but only at 25 frames per second, and it still suffers from the same heavy 64% / 1.55x crop as the EOS M50 II, which really makes it a high-quality 1080/60p camera rather than a 4K one for the majority of users.Īlso note that on the R100, autofocusing during 4K recording is only contrast-based, which is slower and less precise than the phase-detection system that operates in the camera's 1080p mode. ![]() The EOS R50 can record up to 4K UHD / 30p / 10-bit footage internally with dual-pixel auto-focus and auto-exposure. The R100 has a slightly more limited ISO range of 100-12,800 which can be expanded up to 25,600. On the Canon R50 the ISO range for stills runs from 100-32,000, which can be further expanded up to ISO 51,200, exactly the same as the EOS R10. Subsequently the image quality for both stills and video will be better in the R50 than the R100. The R100's 24.1 megapixel sensor is different to the one found in both the R50 and R10, and it's also paired with the older Digic 8 processor. The new Canon R100 also has a 24 megapixel sensor, but it's an older model that's been inherited from the EOS M50 Mark II and "optimised" for the R100. The Canon R50 has a more advanced 24.2 megapixel APS-C CMOS sensor which is partnered with the very latest Digic X processor. You can also read our detailed Canon EOS R50 review to find out exactly what we think of that particular camera. We're bringing you this in-depth head-to-head comparison between the new Canon EOS R100 and its slightly more expensive sibling, the EOS R50, to find out what the key differences are between them. The entry-level EOS R100 and EOS R50 cameras were released within 6 months of each other as Canon seeks to dominate all areas of the mirrorless market, but which camera should you choose? ![]()
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