I’m in the market for a new mirrorless camera but I need a longer lens than the standard 18 - 55 or thereabouts, which most seem to come with.
I can just about afford up to £1400 which gives me two Canon cameras as follows :
1/ R50 body only plus RF S 18 - 150 lens or
2/ R10 with the same lens as above, in a kit
Both are pretty much £1350
Which would you go for and why, please ?
R50; it has MUCH improved subject detection, really matters for say video where it's super-sticky vs the R10 can get lost and you have to re-tap on the subject. R50 is much better in AF for stills, too.
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The R50 does oversampled 4K30 just like the R10, but, the R10 can do 4K/60, but the heavy crop makes it pretty much useless for most general purpose.
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When you're dealing with a smaller body like the R50, it makes touch and drag the only needed way to use AF outside of letting the AI-AF chose for you (which is really good on the R50) as it's really easy and fast to do touch and drag AF when it's very, reachable.
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R50 has improved SOOC JPEG rendition, if you're a JPEG shooter. Some folks don't like the new contrast balance, I do, but that's me.
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It's lighter and cheaper, both wins.
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The R50 lacks sensor cleaning, but, if it's just the 18-150? That's perfect as that means it's rarely if ever coming off the body anyways.
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Keep in mind though the small buffer, I didn't find it a problem with my time with it so long as, A. You use C-RAW instead of RAW and B. Use a fast UHS-I card. I used a SanDisk Extreme Pro (95mb/sec version).
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The R10 does have Mech shutter, deeper buffer, and AF joystick and 4K60, but, Mech shutter needs a fast f/1.2 prime to really see the benefit, which is silly on a crop body, that's what an R8, R6 II, R5, R3 are for, the deeper buffer isn't so much a problem if you shoot C-RAW and a fast UHS-I card and shoot in short bursts; if you're shooting longer bursts, IE pro or semi-pro sports? You already know you need a R10 or R7 and the R50 is out. The AF joystick is really moot on an R50 where I barely needed touch and drag because the newer AF that the R50 has (that the R10 doesn't) means you almost never need to override the detected AF to begin with, the smaller body means touch and drag is fast and easy too, and the 4K/60 is cropped on the R10 making it pointless unless you plan to shoot a lot of cropped 4K anyways, again, that means you're probably pro or semi-pro sports which again, R10 or even R7 are your choice out the gate.
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Hope that helps.