DPReview.com is closing April 10th - Find out more

Canon M50 mark II eye-AF better than M6 mark II?

Started Jul 16, 2021 | Discussions thread
thunder storm Forum Pro • Posts: 10,139
Re: Canon M50 mark II eye-AF better than M6 mark II?

MAC wrote:

m100 wrote:

thunder storm wrote:

Risto456 wrote:

Certainly. Indeed, so far I haven't found a good side-by-side comparison or even a site where both mk2 cameras were tested in a similar way, but hopefully links below would be of some use.

While not very scientific tests, when comparing to my experience with M6 mkII (also represented well on other Youtube AF-test videos), to me the new M50's eye-AF algorithms look improved.

Link 1 - M50mk2 Eye-AF Test around 3:40 mark

and

Link 2 - M50mk2 review around 4:15

My conclusion: The M50II recognizes eyes at a larger distance (or, more precise, with persons being smaller in the frame) compared to the M6mkII.

I'm interested in this topic as often recommended here spot-AF had not delivered on a few occasions (especially with environmental portraits, despite the AF point covering person's face, the camera focused on the surrounding foliage slightly behind - and actually very similar phenomenon was being discussed on the Canon R forum).

A better eye recognition won't help for focusing on brighter backgrounds in stead of the subject. If that's your problem, the best thing you could do is mount a large aperture lens (even if you're shooting stopped down) AND use the smallest single AF point.

The larger aperture will provide more light to the AF-system to get enough contrast to grab focus. This will help you more than better eye recognition, as recognizing the eye is one thing, but focusing on that eye is another thing. If the camera succeeds in recognizing it, that's isn't guaranteeing you it will be able to focus on it.

Of course I'm tempted to, at some point (Black Friday maybe?), just buy the M50mk2 and compare it side-by-side, but hopefully someone else in this forum has gone that (questionable) path already.

Sigma ef-m 16mm f/1.4

Canon ef-m 32mm f/1.4

Sigma ef-m 56mm f/1.4

adapted Sigma 18-35mm f/1.8

adapted Sigma 50-100mm f/1.8

Those lenses are helpful to get good focus in back lit situations. A used 18-35mm can be pretty affordable.

It sure does look like she is using the kit lens in the video too.

I am wondering how good it will work with the 32mm lens.

yes, would like someone to test with the 32 and 56

If it recognizes the eye with a kitlens it will recognize it with those primes too. So for eye recognition I don't need extra tests.  If you want to know if it actually nails focus you need the actual pictures anyway, for nailing focus the given sources aren't proving anything for the kitlens too anyway.

-- hide signature --

I love 50mm (equivalence)

 thunder storm's gear list:thunder storm's gear list
Canon EOS 6D Canon EOS M6 II Canon EOS R5 Sony a7 IV Canon EF-S 15-85mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM +24 more
Post (hide subjects) Posted by
MAC
MAC
MAC
MAC
MAC
MAC
MAC
MAC
MAC
MAC
MAC
MAC
MAC
Keyboard shortcuts:
FForum PPrevious NNext WNext unread UUpvote SSubscribe RReply QQuote BBookmark MMy threads
Color scheme? Blue / Yellow