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Anyone Ordering The R5C?

shadowsports
Legend
Legend

Greetings,

Anyone else considering?  The R5C was not the road I anticipated taking, but I'm tired of waiting and since this body doesn't overheat, I am more confident about it over the standard R5.      

Although I am a stills shooter, the Cinema EOS side of the body is intriguing.  Its so much smaller than a C70.  I'm not serious enough about video that I'd miss Clog2.  The body has 16 14 stops so plenty of DR for my use.  Its also not limited to Super35 or 16 (which isn't so much a limitation), but Canon has really stepped up here.  I don't care about ibis.  All of my lenses except 1 are IS and the body has digital IS built in.  I have purchased a bunch of accessories.  Control Ring Adapter, 2 512GB CF ExpressB, 2 128GB UHSII, 2x Watson batteries (Canon was out of stock), and I've not tried Manfrotto batteries yet.  

Going to try the AngelBird CFExpress cards and ProGrade for the XD Cards.  I've always used SanDisk so going to try something else.  Both are highly rated.

I also contacted EasyCover in the Netherlands and my contact there has said they do not plan to make a skin for the R5C.  Was hoping for this, but am more excited about a new body.  Haven't pulled the trigger quite yet.  I have a quick business trip and wanted to be back for the arrival.  Plan to wait a week.  If nothing glaring is reported, I will finally move to mirrorless.

 

~Rick
Bay Area - CA


~R5 C (1.1.2.1), ~R50v (1.1.1) ~RF Trinity, ~RF 100 Macro, ~RF 100~400, ~RF 100~500, ~RF 200-800 +RF 1.4x TC, BG-R10, 430EX III-RT ~DxO PhotoLab Elite ~DaVinci Resolve Studio ~ImageClass MF644Cdw/MF656Cdw ~Pixel 8 ~CarePaks Are Worth It

131 REPLIES 131

Hi Rick,

Thank you.

I have been considering a PD power bank for 8K/60fps video, but I have yet to find one that doesn't have a host of bad reviews.  Furthermore, I'm not sure how I would carry one ... in a pocket, or a belt loop case, if one exists?  The optimal solution would be a Gold Mount or 'V'mount battery, but that would pose an even greater mounting issue and would negate the advantage of the R5c's size and weight. But battery life is a real issue that Canon should have addressed with a different battery.  Furthermore, the only way that I have found to view any indication of battery charge when the battery grip and 2 batteries are being used, is to switch to photo mode, where there is a menu item that shows battery charge and condition.  Why this same menu item isn't available in video mode is baffling.  And then there is another quirk.  The battery level indicator in video mode shows a lower battery charge for the same point in time than than in photo mode ... that is really odd.  I'm sure that there are other issues that I have yet to find.

Like most new cameras to market, the R5c's RAW files are not recognized by Capture one and others.  However, a simple batch removal of the letter 'c' from the camera's nomenclature, via EXIF Editor, fixes that problem.

Regards,

Ron

I also pre-ordered the R5c but no guesses of when it'll come in. Since you ordered it so early, can I ask if yours came in yet? If you didn't get yours yet, I certainly won't get mine in time.

Did you end up getting your camera? I ordered mine and got an email that it's shipping soon.
If you did get it may I ask when you put in the pre-order?

Yes, it arrived on Tuesday via FedEx overnight.  I had ordered early morning on Jan 19th.  I suspect that you haven't noticed the multitude of posts that I have placed regarding the camera, accessories and such.  If not, check out the earlier posts under the heading 'Anyone ordering the R5c'.  it's a great camera, I'm still on the learning curve for the photo side—which I probably will not use much—but the video side is familiar to me.

shadowsports
Legend
Legend

Good Morning,

I read the post about the gentleman who wrote the script which removed the "c" designation.  DxO doesn't have support  for it yet either, but they are typically super speedy with new body's and lenses so I expect to see it on their roadmap any day.  

I'm going to get a smaller PD as well.  Something with a long cord I can keep in a pocket, with a 90* magnetic mount for the camera.  That or similar variant.  The truth is, I will use the camera more for still photography than video.  At least initially.  Some of the guys here have made some compelling rationalizations on why the R5 is adequate for my intended use.  If there were thousands of dollars difference, I might agree.  But $600 no. 

One of the videos I watched a few weeks ago showed 2 scenarios.  One where the author disabled the EVF and LCD on the R5.  I think he got 3+ hrs of recording before finally saying its possible with the 29:59 limitation.  "Great" he sighted for interviews.

Then he was shooting stills in 95* weather and started getting temp warnings.  It was determined that the camera was not actually overheating, but instead warning of the potential should he decide to shoot video.  He then changed all of his video settings to 1080 or lowest available and the warning ceased.  While I fully acknowledge this is arbitrary, it demonstrated (to me anyway) that the camera is doing something funny or unordinary.  While ignoring a flashing icon is possible, its not something I care to see for $4K.

Then the videos where people are seeing recovery times which are just unrealistic for real world use, and while its unlikely I would see these types of events, if I did just once I'd be extremely disappointed.  I believe much of it is probably a reach, but I'm just not willing to invest in this uncertainty.  The R5's software is doing funny stuff whatever way you want to look at it and no matter how great of a stills camera it is.

Enter the R5C and for a modest amount of additional cost, you get quite a bit more camera (and capability) for the money.  It comes with its own nuances, but these issues are definitely in a different class.  Your G2 lens for example.  You might be pleasantly surprised with a newer FW version although I think you are wise not to expect it.  

Battery level and amount of charge.  I knew this was going to be an issue.  Some of the posts I read did say that people got more than double what Canon claims as number of shots (still) on a charged battery.  They were using conservative EVF and review settings.  This is how I use my camera now, so I will easily adopt this on a newer power hungry body.

Video of course is a different story and anything with smaller DSLR size batteries is going to struggle.  I would consider contacting Canon and making them aware (feature request) of a battery screen on the Cinema side (menu).  I agree there's not likely a reason it isn't there.  I doubt its a memory limitation, etc.  Does the C70 and C300 mkIII have it?  I think the still side menu has 6 segments on the LCD.  The other benefit of the camera is that PD can charge the batteries when the camera is in standby.  So wake up and shoot draws power, charging stops, and when the camera sleeps, charging resumes (I believe) on the battery which is not actively being used.  

I did not anticipate that the camera would be back ordered this long.  For months Canon Rumors was reporting that Canon had anticipated and acquired enough raw materials to meet the demand.  It is what it is.  I've waited and waited and waited some more.  So more time isn't going to matter much.  I have my morning ritual.  Open browser, Home page and R5C's page on B&H's website opens.  Have a stock alert set and it's added to my cart. 

Have A Good Day.

Rick  

 

~Rick
Bay Area - CA


~R5 C (1.1.2.1), ~R50v (1.1.1) ~RF Trinity, ~RF 100 Macro, ~RF 100~400, ~RF 100~500, ~RF 200-800 +RF 1.4x TC, BG-R10, 430EX III-RT ~DxO PhotoLab Elite ~DaVinci Resolve Studio ~ImageClass MF644Cdw/MF656Cdw ~Pixel 8 ~CarePaks Are Worth It

jaanmasi527
Apprentice

I have not had any time to play around with the new Cinema RAW Lite available on the C70 and R5 C.  Was very surprised to be getting RAW video capabilities.  Thank you, Canon!

Hi Rick,

The backordered issue is certainly bothersome, and it applies to the batteries as well.  The C300 does have a battery level indicator, but it allows only one battery at a time. And the R5c does have a battery level indicator for video, but the problem comes into play with the battery grip that contains 2 batteries, while the camera's battery level meter only reflects the presence of 1, unless it is reporting the sum of both batteries, but there is no documentation to that effect.

I do agree that the R5c is a better choice than the R5 for numerous reasons, but then there is the caveat of no IBIS for stills.  That said, I bought the R5c primarily for video, while my stills requirements are met by the Fuji series of GFX cameras (GFX100, 100s and GFX 50s), however, I have tried using the R5c for stills and the results are great, even without IBIS, and my test clips with the R5c shooting 4k at 29.97 FPS are impressive.

As for a PD power source, I am am still performing my due diligence, and have yet to decide on which to buy. Ideally, I would like something that would fit in a pocket, but a belt loop case would work as well.  The one power issue that sets my C300 apart from the R5c is its battery options, that include Canon's highest capacity battery, as well as the option for a 'V' mount or Anton Bauer type source.  Both of these batteries could be setup with a 'd' tap to the R5c, but I cannot envision a setup for mounting or carrying one of those beasts.

Regards,

Ron

Hi AtticusLake,

I wonder if you can tell me if it is possible to turn off the C70's internal microphone in order to use an external mic?

Ron

wobbleman99
Rising Star

I have yet to try RAW LTE as well, but I have encountered another bothersome issue with the R5c.  There is currently no way to turn off the internal microphone.  I have the Tascam XLR adapter that I am using with a Rode NTG-5 shotgun mic, I have the NTG set to record to channels 1&2, and it appears that the internal mic records to tracks 3&4.  I am able to mute or delete tracks 3&4 in Resolve Studio, but the real issue surfaces when monitoring the recorded audio via headphones.  There is no way to distinguish—as far as I know—the NTG from the internal mic, and there is apparently no way to control the gain for the internal mic, since all of the settings are grayed out when recording in XAVC.  I don't know if this is by design, or if it's an oversight, but it should be addressed by Canon in a future firmware update.

Ron,

Wondering it this has something to do with the way the R5C records a separate audio track, or if its actually a bug whereby the camera disables the internal MIC menu options when the updated hot shoe detects a powered accessory?  

This is another contact Canon and report the issue for sure as it might exist on the R3 as well.  

I also asked "Ricky" rs-eos if he has any thoughts.  

 

~Rick
Bay Area - CA


~R5 C (1.1.2.1), ~R50v (1.1.1) ~RF Trinity, ~RF 100 Macro, ~RF 100~400, ~RF 100~500, ~RF 200-800 +RF 1.4x TC, BG-R10, 430EX III-RT ~DxO PhotoLab Elite ~DaVinci Resolve Studio ~ImageClass MF644Cdw/MF656Cdw ~Pixel 8 ~CarePaks Are Worth It

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