Honestly, I think that the 6D is a great camera for landscape photography. I think that the 5D4 will beat the 6D in dynamic range, and slightly edge the 6D in low light /noise performance. IMO the main advantage between the two, besides the 5D4 having higher MP, would be the AF points (61 vs 11) and cross-point AF (11 vs 1), and dual cards.
Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n) The Wi-Fi versions supported by the device. supports a remote smartphone. Canon EOS 60D. Canon EOS 6D Mark II. This technology allows the users to use their smartphone as a remote control for the device. has an HDMI output. Canon EOS 60D.
An In-Depth Comparison of the Canon 5D Mark III and Nikon D800 DxOMark: Canon 5D Mark III Sensor Best Among Canons, Falls Short of Nikon Canon 5D Mark IV vs Nikon D810 vs Sony A7R II: Side-by-Side
The body has the same ergonomics and controls as the current 5D series but an older version of the menu system. It's still easy to navigate though. The 5D3 was a decent step up in image quality. The original 6D had better image quality than the 5D3, but the ergonomics, controls, and menu system aren't as good.
Canon EOS 5D Mark III vs. Canon EOS 7D Mark II. Side by side. 2 cameras compared (14bit, Canon original RAW 2nd edition) Digital Print Order Format [DPOF] Version
I tend to agree with you about lighting. Particularly in studio or a location with lighting equipment can be used and controlled, I would expect the resulting files to look about the same. Particularly if shooting tethered, where the 5D MK II's low resolution back lcd doesn't have to be solely relied on for checking fine focus / exposure.
Optional accessories are available for the 5D MK3 to add WiFi or GPS but they come at a price of several hundreds of dollars. Worth noting though is that Canon say the GPS in the 6D is only accurate to about 100m. I believe the additional GPS accessory (which works for 6D and 5D ) is accurate down to a much smaller area. If that is of interest
The 20MP Canon EOS 6D is Canon's smallest, lightest and most affordable full-frame DSLR yet, aimed at enthusiast photographers. As well as a newly developed CMOS sensor the 6D features an 11-point autofocus system with a single cross-type point at the center of the array, which can achieve focus down to -3EV, which is little more than moonlight.
As for your question, if youve got the money, the 5D IV is the way I would go. Better sensor, resolution, joy stick, dual card slots, are just a few things that make it a no brainer (for me at least). Coming from a crop sensor to the full frame sensor equivalent to the 5d IV, I am blown away by how high I can push the ISO and still retain quality.
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canon 5d mk3 vs 6d