The new EOS R50 ( $680 for the body only) has a 24.2 megapixel APS-C crop sensor and can shoot 30 fps 4K video—it's $80 more expensive than the EOS M50 Mark II, but that model is tied to the The Canon EOS 6D Mark II is a full-frame DSLR camera. It’s well-built, comfortable to use, has an intuitive menu system, and offers decent overall battery life. It also delivers excellent image quality, with little apparent noise or graininess present in images and a fairly high dynamic range. The full-frame sensor in the Canon 6D outperforms any crop sensor camera in low light. This gives me a huge advantage when shooting as the sun is coming up or going down. Some of my favorite photos were taken at ISO 6400. The low light capabilities of a full-frame camera make it the better choice hands down. 50mm full frame on a crop sensor is 80mm. What about the 1.8. I was under the impression the fstop changes as well You're mixing up terminology. The aperture of a lens does not change going from full frame to a crop sensor.. A 50mm full frame on a crop sensor is NOT an 80mm lens. A 50mm lens on an 80D is still a 50mm lens on a 6D. I've seen the 60D and 6D referred to as essentially the same camera except for sensor size. Their controls are virtually identical. Yes, there are some differences in menu-setting abilities. Not too much overall. The distinguish feature of the 6D is it's Full-frame. That wasn't the main subject of my post. Canon EOS R50 9.4% Nikon Z fc 7.5% Canon EOS R7 6.6% Sony a7CR 2.4% Fujifilm X-S20 1.9% Nikon Zf 1.9% Sony a6700 1.8% Nikon Z8 1.5% Canon EOS R6 Mark II 1.3% Canon PowerShot G7 X Mark III 1.2% Popular interchangable lens cameras » On a Canon, there is no “crop mode” menu to worry about. (Either you have a Canon EF-S lens which will NOT mount on a full-frame body at all, or you have a third-party lens like the Tokina 11-16, and it will mount just fine.) So, let’s see how the Tokina 11-16 looks at 16mm on full-frame! Nikon D600, Nikon 14-24 @ 16mm. Full-frame sensors are usually 36mm X 24mm. The pixels of the full-frame sensor are also larger in size than those of a crop-sensor. Full-frame sensors also capture more of the view that is visible to you when you frame an image. As both, the Canon 5D Mark ii and the Canon 6D, are full-frame sensors, they provide superior image quality. ULyMBR.

canon 6d full frame or crop