03-03-2013 01:43 AM - edited 03-03-2013 01:50 AM
In 7D
Raw: 15 in one burst.
M-Raw: 24 in one burst.
In 60D
Raw: 16 in one burst.
M-Raw: 19 in one burst.
In 1DX
Raw: 35 in one burst.
M-Raw: 26 in one burst.
6D
Raw: 14 in one burst.
M-Raw: 8 in one burst.
5DIII
Raw: 13 in one burst.
M-Raw: 10 in one burst.
What has Canon done to the M-Raw?
03-06-2013 08:25 AM
Hi Peter,
There are a couple things to keep in mind here. The hardware in each camera is different from one model to the next. Processing power and available buffer memory have an impact on the maximum burst. The newer models, like the EOS 5D Mark III, EOS 6D and EOS-1D X, also produce higher resolution images that have a larger file size than the earlier models. The file size of an M-RAW image taken with one camera is not always identical to the file size of an M-RAW image taken with another camera.
If this is a time sensitive-matter, additional support options are available at Contact Us.
03-07-2013 06:34 PM
Thank you for your answer, even if it doesn´t explain what Canon did with the new cameras.
The thing is that I bought a 6D. Beause the wireless function from 6D not allow bigger jpg than the smallest one, and because the transferring is not automatically I will need a slow and small 16 GB Eie-fi card instead. I don´t really have any use of 20 mp every time I take pictures, so I thought M-Raw would be a great choice, even if I loose some contrast and image quality in M-Raw compared to Raw. My 7D works like a charm with M-Raw.
03-13-2013 02:53 PM
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