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Canon EOS R Camera Review

John Riley reviews the new Canon EOS R, Canon's full-frame 30mp mirrorless camera, with new RF mount.

Highres Canon Rf24 105mm F4l Without Hood on Canon Eosr Oblique View 1538384097

Quick Verdict

The Canon EOS R delivers a competent package, with great image quality, with a high quality 24-105mm f/4L lens, however there are a few design choices that will frustrate some, such as only one SD card slot, and heavily cropped 4K video recording. 

Highres Canon Eosr Front View 1538384778

It seems that 2018 is rapidly becoming the year of the full frame mirrorless camera system. With other marques hot on their heels, Canon offer the new EOS R and its accompanying lenses, plus of course a handy adapter to enable the use of current EF and EF-S optics. The Canon RF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM lens has been looked at in detail and now we examine the EOS R camera body, along with the Mount Adapter EF-EOSR. That both the body and lens are the start of a brand new system makes this an especially exciting prospect, so let's see how it works out in terms of both handling and the overall quality of the results.

Canon EOS R Features

Highres Canon Rf24 105mm F4l With Hood on Canon Eosr Oblique View 1538384064

The main benefit of mirrorless CSCs is perhaps the removal of the mirror box, eliminating the vibration known as “mirror slap” and reducing the register distance of lenses. This latter point means that lenses can be less dependent on retrofocus design and in theory can be more compact, simpler in optical construction and theoretically providing better quality as a result. In practice there is little evidence that full-frame lenses have generally become smaller or lighter, but camera bodies have reduced slightly in bulk and indeed the EOS R weighs in at just 580g.

The core of the EOS R is a new, solidly made metal RF mount with electronic contacts. This has a wide throat, 54mm, the same as the Canon EOS DSLR range, that will make the design of wide aperture lenses much easier. Built into the concept from the start is an inexpensive, well designed mount adapter that gives the register distance for using existing DSLR EF lenses, plus all the necessary electronic contacts. At least for now, the adapter is supplied with the camera on its own or as part of the kit of lens plus body.

Highres Canon Eos R Hands on 4 1536142915

There is a 30.3mp full-frame CMOS sensor, plus DIGIC 8 Processing and in-camera Digital Lens Optimiser. Dual pixel CMOS phase detection AF is fast and reliable, with an impressive 5,455 focus points. The camera offers silent shooting thanks to an electronic shutter, and continuous shooting is available at speeds up to 8fps, or 5fps with continuous AF. The silent shooting is a clear advantage over the clatter of DSLR mirrors, and press events may become eerily silent if the mirrorless concept takes over. The AF is active down to a rather impressive -6EV.

The camera features Dual Pixel Raw – which was first introduced on the Canon EOS 5D Mark IV (see the review for more details) – and this can be used to fine tune the focus after you’ve taken the shot on your computer.

With the new RF lens mount, Canon has introduced four new lenses, including a standard RF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM lens, a 50mm f/1.2L USM lens, a 35mm f/1.8 IS Macro lens, and a rather large 28-70mm f/2L lens. The camera does not feature in-camera image stabilisation, instead relying on the lens featuring image stabilisation. Electronic image stabilisation is available for video recording, however, this crops into the image.

The electronic viewfinder (EVF) in the EOS R offers a high resolution of 3.69million dots, and has a 0.76x magnification giving a large view. The rear screen is a 3.15inch touch-screen with a 2.1million dot resolution. There's also a top LCD display giving shooting information, as well as battery life when the camera is off.

4K video recording offers frame rates up to 30fps, and there are built-in stereo mics. 4K video is UHD video resolution, for CINE resolution, you need to look at the Canon EOS 5D Mark IV. Video is recorded internally in 8-bit, and for 10-bit video recording you need to use the HDMI output.

As you would expect, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth are built-in, which lets you remotely control the camera, and transfer images. Bluetooth offers lower power consumption compared to simply relying on Wi-Fi.

Highres Canon Eos R Hands on 2 1536142871

Key Features

  • 30.3mp full-frame CMOS sensor, with low-pass filter
  • RF lens mount
  • Dual Pixel CMOS AF, -6EV
  • DIGIC 8 image processor
  • Face detection focus with Eye-AF
  • 3.15inch vari-angle touch-screen, 2.1m dots
  • 3.69million dot OLED EVF, 0.76x magnification
  • ISO50-ISO102400 (Extended)
  • 4K video recording. 10-bit output (via HDMI), stereo mics
  • Mic, headphone sockets
  • 8fps continuous shooting (speed maintained for 100 JPEG, 47 RAW, 78 C-RAW images)
  • 5fps continuous shooting - with AF
  • Silent shooting
  • Wi-Fi, Bluetooth built-in
  • LP-E6N battery, 370 shot battery life
  • Single SD card slot
  • USB 3.1 Type-C

Canon EOS R Handling

Highres Canon Eos R Hands on 6 1536143000

The general feel of the EOS R is similar to a small but solidly made DSLR, and with lens it is fairly close in size, bulk and weight to a Pentax K-1 with its 28-105mm lens. The bulk just lies in different places. This means that although the mirrorless camera is in some ways more compact, we still need a bag to carry it in, it isn't pocketable, and it will burden us weight-wise to a similar degree. However, this isn't the whole point.

The 24-105mm f/4 lens is fully covered in our review and it does blend very well with the camera body. Balance is perfect and the two feel very good indeed in the hand. Good solid manufacture inspires confidence.

Different cameras have different strengths and the one real practical strength here is using the camera on a tripod. Being able to touch the screen and have the camera both focus on that point and release the shutter is fantastic. Being right handed unfortunately means that when our right hand moves in to touch the screen it passes the sensor that switches the view to the EVF and the screen goes dark. The answer is to use the left hand to operate the touch screen, maybe a minor point but also a minor irritation every time it is forgotten. There is also quite a dependence on the menu system to control commonly used parameters, rather than dedicated buttons. This is a question of familiarity though, and ultimately once we are used to the way it works it probably makes little difference. The options are all clear and the menu system works well.

Highres Canon Eosr Rear View Showing Articulating Screen 1538384796

The silent shooting is amazing. No more clattering mirrors, something that will be very welcome in all sorts of shooting situations. The camera is also brimming with potential, as can be seen from the vast list of available features. There is virtually endless capability and any ergonomic inconveniences are as much a matter of familiarity as anything else. The rear monitor is excellent and the touch facility a great way to make all the menus work.

Looking through the viewfinder, we see a slightly garish view of the world, but a detailed one that has no visible lag. This OLED EVF is actually pretty impressive and can be set to mimic the changes that are being dialled into the image by the photographer. It may still not have quite the same real-world clarity of the best glass pentaprism finders, but it is a different sort of beast with its own advantages, not least the absence of the bulk of the pentaprism housing.

Operational temperatures down to 0C do not match the DSLR performance of -10C or so, perhaps because the viewfinders will black out at very low temperatures, but this will only affect quite specialised use. Apart from some specialised uses, this CSC can do more or less anything that a DSLR can do.

Highres Canon Eos R 7 1536163751

The mode button needs to be pressed to switch between the different shooting modes:

  • Scene intelligent auto
  • Fv - flexible priority AE
  • P - program AE (variable) 
  • Tv - shutter priority
  • Av - aperture priority
  • Manual
  • Bulb
  • Custom modes: C1p, C2p, C3p

Pressing the mode button and then the info button will switch between stills and movie shooting. In the movie mode there are auto, P, Tv, Sv, Manual and 3 custom modes. It's a shame there isn't a quicker way to switch between the still photo and video modes. - although you can simply press the video record button in photo mode, however this means you're not able to frame the scene before you start recording. 

The front lens ring can be customised, the rear "Multi Function Bar" (touch pad) can also be customised, as can a number of other controls on the camera. However, we didn't find the Multi Function Bar particularly intuitive or quick to use, with the front and rear control wheels being quicker and easier to use. With so many customisable options it can take a while to get to grips with how the camera operates and it may take you some time to get the camera configured to how you would like it. 

Highres Canon Eos R 9 1536163758

There is side access to the memory card slot, which is a single SD card slot, which will disappoint some. The top LCD screen can be illuminated so that you can view it in low light. 

Auto focus controls and performance

There are numerous AF controls, and you can use the touchscreen to set the focus position. You can use the 4-way controller to set the position after pressing the AF point button.  You can customise how the AF system responds with five pages of AF options in the menu system. 

There are 5,655 AF points, which is a lot! However when selecting an AF point you can set the size to small or normal and there are around 65 points vertically (covering 100% top to bottom) and 88 horizontally (almost to the edges - covering 88%) when using the smaller size. 

Face and eye detection worked reasonably well but not in all circumstances, so often it was quicker to manually select the AF point using the touch screen and simply press the screen on the subject (for example on a person's eye). 

Highres Canon Eos R 11 1536142708

Battery life - Battery Life is rated at 370 shots, and can be extended further by enabling ECO mode. In battery info you can view the battery life left as a percentage (eg 71%) as well as the number of shots taken with that battery. 

Canon EOS R Performance

The performance section is where we look at the image quality performance of the camera. Additional sample photos and product shots are available in the Equipment Database, where you can add your own review, photos and product ratings. 

You can view even more sample photos, taken with the Canon RF 50mm f/1.2L USM lens, and Canon RF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM lens.

Speed - We took a number of shots to test the camera's responsiveness, from switch on to first photo, shot to shot, focusing speed etc. We take a number of shots and then use the average to ensure accurate and consistent tests, making it easy to compare with other cameras.

Shutter Response <0.05secs
Wide - Focus / Shutter Response 0.30secs
Full zoom - Focus / Shutter Response  0.20secs
Switch on Time to Taking a Photo 0.45secs
Shot to Shot without Flash 0.20secs
Shot to Shot with Flash N/A
Continuous Shooting - JPEG
(shots before slow down)
8.3fps (49 shots)
Continuous Shooting - Flash N/A
Continuous Shooting - RAW 8.1fps (23 shots)

The EOS R is a snappy and efficient camera. Response times are fast and the AF locks on swiftly and with great accuracy. It is so far removed from the somewhat pedestrian speed of the Live View in some DSLRs.

Canon EOS R Other sample images

The camera delivers excellent colour reproduction, and good levels of sharpness straight from the camera. For full details on how the Canon RF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM lens performs, have a look at our full review

Canon EOS R Lens test images

Canon EOS R Camera Review
Autumn Tree | 1/200 sec | f/8.0 | 40.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
Herbaceous Border | 1/80 sec | f/16.0 | 24.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
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Pond Garden | 1/80 sec | f/16.0 | 24.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
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Portrait 1 | 1/800 sec | f/8.0 | 50.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
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Portrait 2 Sisters | 1/160 sec | f/22.0 | 63.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
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Tea Cottage | 1/400 sec | f/8.0 | 87.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
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Tea Cottage Window | 1/60 sec | f/22.0 | 31.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
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1/160 sec | f/4.5 | 105.0 mm | ISO 500 | high res
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1/125 sec | f/4.0 | 105.0 mm | ISO 3200 | high res
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1/80 sec | f/4.5 | 70.0 mm | ISO 4000 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
1/125 sec | f/4.5 | 105.0 mm | ISO 500 | high res
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1/160 sec | f/4.5 | 105.0 mm | ISO 400 | high res
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Detective | 1/80 sec | f/1.2 | 50.0 mm | ISO 320 | high res
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A Portrait Outdoors | 1/160 sec | f/5.0 | 105.0 mm | ISO 100 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Portrait | 1/800 sec | f/1.2 | 50.0 mm | ISO 100 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Portrait | 1/125 sec | f/4.5 | 105.0 mm | ISO 320 | high res
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A Lowlight | 1/80 sec | f/4.0 | 105.0 mm | ISO 12800 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Low Light | 1/125 sec | f/4.0 | 105.0 mm | ISO 10000 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Low Light | 1/125 sec | f/4.0 | 88.0 mm | ISO 6400 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Bokeh | 1/125 sec | f/4.5 | 105.0 mm | ISO 1000 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Bokeh | 1/125 sec | f/4.5 | 105.0 mm | ISO 6400 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Low Light | 1/125 sec | f/4.5 | 105.0 mm | ISO 10000 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Pastel Colours | 1/80 sec | f/4.0 | 65.0 mm | ISO 1600 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Pastel Colours | 1/80 sec | f/4.0 | 65.0 mm | ISO 1600 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Acrobat | 1/125 sec | f/4.0 | 105.0 mm | ISO 1000 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Acrobat | 1/125 sec | f/4.5 | 105.0 mm | ISO 6400 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Detective | 1/160 sec | f/4.5 | 105.0 mm | ISO 4000 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Eye | 1/60 sec | f/1.6 | 50.0 mm | ISO 640 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
A Green | 1/80 sec | f/1.2 | 50.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
Closest Focus | 0.4 sec | f/8.0 | 105.0 mm | ISO 100 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
Cruck Barn CA And Flare Test | 1/25 sec | f/8.0 | 24.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
Texture In Brick And Wood | 1/400 sec | f/8.0 | 24.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
Bokeh At F4 | 1/1600 sec | f/4.0 | 63.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
Bokeh At F5.6 | 1/800 sec | f/5.6 | 63.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
Bokeh At F8 | 1/400 sec | f/8.0 | 63.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
Bokeh At F11 | 1/200 sec | f/11.0 | 63.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
Bokeh At F16 | 1/100 sec | f/16.0 | 63.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
Canon EOS R Camera Review
Bokeh At F22 | 1/50 sec | f/22.0 | 63.0 mm | ISO 200 | high res
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Canon EOS R Specifications

Manufacturer
Canon
Image Sensor
Pixels
30Mp (Megapixels)
Pixels (W)
6720
Pixels (H)
4480
Sensor Type
CMOS
Sensor Size
Full Frame
Sensor Size (width)
36mm
Sensor Size (height)
24mm
Aspect Ratio
4:3
3:2
16:9
1:1
LCD Monitor
LCD Monitor
3.15in
Screen resolution
2.1m dots
Touch Screen
Yes
Focusing
Focusing modes
Autofocus
Manual
Spot
Face Detection
AF Tracking
Multi
Centre
Exposure Control
Shutter speeds shortest
1/8000sec
Shutter speeds longest
30sec
Bulb mode
Yes
Exp modes
Program
Aperture-Priority
Shutter-Priority
Manual
Program Variable
Metering
Centre-weighted - Average
Multi Pattern
Centre Spot
ISO sensitivity
50 - 102400
White balance
Auto
Manual
Outdoors/Daylight
Cloudy
Incandescent
Fluorescent
Shade
Flash
Exposure Comp
+/-3
Viewfinder
Viewfinder Resolution
3.69m dots
Magnification
0.76x
Shooting Options
Continuous shooting
8fps
Video
Movie mode
Yes
Video Resolution
1920x1080 FullHD
1280x720 HD 720p
4K
Video FPS
4K at 30,24fps, FullHD at 60,30,24fps
Stereo Sound
Yes
Optical Zoom with Video
Yes
Other Features
Image Stabilisation
No
Interface
HDMI
Yes
USB
USB-C
Wi-Fi
Yes
Storage
Card Type
SD
SDHC
SDXC
File Type
RAW
JPG
RAW + JPG
Power Source
Battery Type
LP-E6N
Battery Life (CIPA rating)
370shots
Box Contents
Box Contents
No Data
Dimensions
Weight
660g
Width
135.8mm
Height
98.3mm
Depth
67.7mm

Canon EOS R Verdict

Features
Handling
Performance
Value for money
Verdict
Pros
  • Excellent performance
  • Weather proofing
  • Quality manufacture
  • Silent operation
  • No mirror vibration
  • Viable EF lens adapter
  • Great ergonomics
  • Fast and responsive
  • 10bit 4K output (via HDMI)
Cons
  • Limited lens range (mitigated by adapter for EF lenses)
  • Limited cold weather operation
  • Not particularly smaller than a small DSLR
  • Single SD card slot will disappoint some
  • 4K video crop factor

Comments

Niknut
Niknut
14 3.8k
Oct 1, 2018 4:50pm
OMG !!....what a beaut !!....nice size & weight, with great ergonomics & impressive IQ ! I've now got to find a pair of trousers with ridiculously deep pockets, 'cos the one's I've got will only hold a packet of chewing-gum ??.......& £2349 is about 2 decimal points too many, based on my state-pension !!!!. Gonna dream about this one tonight !!!!.BlushBlush
Niknut
Niknut
14 3.8k
Oct 2, 2018 8:00pm
Just to be sure......the weight is quoted as 580grms !.....yet in the specifications it's quoted as 660grms ?? I'm assuming the heavier weight is with the battery installed ??....not mentioned in the specs !!. Is there any indication when it will hit the retailers shelves ??......I've seen Jan 2019 mentioned, but that seems so far off ??. I just can't get this camera out of my mind !!....I'm obsessed with it !!!.BlushBlush
johnriley1uk
johnriley1uk
19 29
Oct 2, 2018 9:56pm
Out came the scales and I have just measured the weight, without card or battery, at 580g. With battery, card and body cap the weight is 660g.
Niknut
Niknut
14 3.8k
Oct 3, 2018 10:27am
Quote:Out came the scales and I have just measured the weight, without card or battery, at 580g. With battery, card and body cap the weight is 660g. Thanks for confirming that John !.....it may only be a minor point, but it makes it confusing when reading the review & specifications !.Smile
steveb127
steveb127
6 1
Oct 3, 2018 3:45pm
I find it strange that for ages you have marked down other cameras for short battery lives and/or lack of dual card slots but somehow these are not failings which would cause less than 5* for features on this camera, especially given the other 'cons'. Not a knock on Canon, just reflecting how inconsistent your reviews are.
johnriley1uk
johnriley1uk
19 29
Oct 3, 2018 4:24pm
The ratings are assessed on all the factors available and with comparison to competitive products in mind as well. Each star is of course a band, not a single mark, so a five star rating does not imply no imperfections or omissions, but rather that the product is in the top band. No system is perfect and the star grades are no exception, but they do provide a useful guide alongside the summary.
Rev2
Rev2
14 302
Oct 3, 2018 4:57pm
I've been looking forward to the release of a mirrorless DSLR camera from Canon and I've had the chance to test it for a couple of hours at their Full Frame Roadshows. The noise levels are incredible, even at ISO 12800 and focus is extremely fast but for me, as an action shooter, it lacks the 2 most important features of a mirrorless camera - high shutter-speed and silent shooting which is only programable on single-shot. Unless Canon issue a software release that addresses these issues pretty swiftly my credit card is staying in my wallet.
hannu108
12 1
Oct 3, 2018 5:04pm
Features: 5/5 with one SD card slot? Also, a heavily cropped 4k video. C'mon. Nikon Z has also one memory card slot but it is an XQD card slot. XQD cards are made to totally different (higher) standards and they are not supposed to fail before the camera. Haven't heard any professional reporting a corrupted XQD card.
ianrobinson
ianrobinson
14 1.2k
Oct 4, 2018 9:35am
love this camera and not even used it yet, Mine is on order and cannot wait. I see many benefits for me as a landscape and wedding photographer, the ef lenses i have are amazing and will go well with this body, I understand that the ef lenses work flawlessly with the adapter rings also loving the filter ring, right up my street for filming and landscapes, loving the focus points of which there are over 5ks worth. loving the fully rotating screen, for me low angle shots will not be an issue anymore, loving the touch screen, loving the auto focusing in video, loving the size and ergonomics of this camera, loving the eye focusing and apparently there will be a firmware upgrade from Canon sorting a couple of issues I am sure. so not much not to love really, the 30 megapixels is plenty for me as well, I own the Canon 5Ds and 5D mkiii with many lovely L lenses so this camera will be in my bag and I can see me using it a lot if not all the time, with weddings still booked for this year I am really excited to have this camera in my hands.
mervyn750
17
Oct 18, 2018 6:07pm
This looks to be a good camera but I was curious about your comment on the "garish view" via the EVF. How does this compare to a Fuji EVF (mine is on the XT-1 and is very clear providing an accurate look of the shot to be taken). I wonder if this is the case with the Canon?
johnriley1uk
johnriley1uk
19 29
Oct 18, 2018 8:12pm
I found the view through the viewfinder to be a bit unrealistically contrasty and saturated, compared with the back screen. However, it's not a major thing and I am sure that it's perfectly usable. I wouldn't like to make a comparison without both cameras being side by side on an identical subject. It's very subjective anyway, with one person perhaps viewing an HDTV or 4K image as over sharp and a bit unrealistic and someone else being just blown away by the detail.
djp
15 1
Feb 2, 2020 6:12pm
Review is very anodine and needs updating from the recent experience of users who have driven forward the use of the R and its ever growing suite of RF lenses.
Alingaga
3 1
Jun 4, 2020 8:25am
What settings must be made so that there is no delay in triggering-shutter lag. Tx!