Last week, on June 20, I was one of the lucky few in Japan to receive a phone call to let me know that my
Canon EOS 1D X Digital SLR camera
was ready to pick up, on the day of its launch. Having spent a lot of
time with the camera over the last six days, today we’re going to review
this amazing new flagship from Canon.
I should say straight up
that because I’m not a sports shooter, you aren’t going to see test
shots of athletes running towards me, as is often the case with reviews
of the 1D series from Canon. I was able to do some bird photography
though, which is another common use of these fast frame rate cameras, so
we’ll touch on the results of a couple of bird shoots, as well as some
high ISO performance tests, which is another area that I know people are
anxious to hear about. First though, let’s take a look at the camera
itself, and touch on some of the nice new features.
As we progress, I’ll compare the 1D X with the 5D Mark III, which I own and
reviewed in March,
and have been using a lot over the three months. I’ll also compare the
1D X to its predecessor the 1D Mark IV sometimes, when that seems more
relevant. I sold my 1D Mark IV in part exchange for the 1D X, so I am
not able to shoot any comparison shots or show the cameras side by side.
A Beautiful Brick (in a good way!)

Canon EOS 1D X
The first thing I noticed when I took the 1D X out of the box was how
sleek the 1D X is. The black paint seems courser, in a good way, than
the 1D Mark IV, which was a little smoother and shinier. The lines
either side of the pentaprism chamber are rounder, and the camera
overall just looks and feels more refined. It’s a brick of course, and
weighs just over 1.5KG, so if weight is a consideration, this is not the
camera for you. If you ever held a 1D Mark IV, it’s about 160g heavier.
I personally like the weight of these 1 series cameras. I buy them for
their ruggedness, and really just expect them to be on the hefty side.
New Buttons
Externally there are also a number of new buttons. On the front of
the camera we now have two depth-of-field preview buttons, so you can
use either depending on whether you are holding the camera in landscape
or portrait mode. Also, right next to the depth-of-field preview buttons
are new Multi-function buttons. There is also a M-fn button close to
the Main Dial behind the shutter buttons, so the new Multi-function
buttons on the front of the camera are called Multi-function 2 buttons.

Canon EOS 1D X – Multi-function and DoF Preview buttons
The two Multi-function 2 buttons can be configured to do a number of
things, and you’ll of course need to make your own selection. For me, at
the moment, I’ve configured mine to toggle between One Shot and AI
Servo focus. The supertelephoto lenses from Canon have buttons around
the front that I always program to do this, so it’s nice to now be able
to toggle easily with all of my lenses. So far I’ve found it very
useful.
On the Back
On the back of the camera, there is the new Quick Control button.
This is also on the 5D Mark III but it was not on the 1D Mark IV. If you
press the Quick Control button while the menu is displayed, it will
jump to the next menu group, but if you press it when the LCD is off, it
will take you into a screen to control the camera. This is useful if
you are working on a tripod and can’t easily see the top LCD, because
you can change all the major settings from the back LCD from the Quick
Control button along with the Multi-controller. There is also now a
second Multi-controller that is position for use in portrait mode, which
is very welcome.

Canon EOS 1D X Back View
Larger LCD
The LCD on the back of the camera is larger at 3.2″, than the 3″
screen on the 1D Mark IV. The 5D Mark III is also 3.2″ but I didn’t
notice the increase as much on the 5D3 as I did with the 1D X. It just
seems bigger, maybe because there isn’t a line of buttons down the left
side like there is on the 5D Mark III.
Also, whereas the small rear LCD panel was directly below the main
LCD Monitor on the 1D Mark IV, with the image Playback button to the
left, and the Erase button, Function button and Protect/Voice memo
buttons below that, on the 1D X, we now have the Playback button,
Index/Magnify/Reduce button, Erase button and the Protect/Voice memo
buttons in a line below the main LCD Monitor and the small LCD Panel is
now below these buttons. There’s a new Card/Image size selection button
to the left of the LCD panel, but this really just replaces the Function
button on the 1D Mark IV.
You might have noticed that this means the Magnify and Reduce button
is now positioned in this group, and not up in the top right as people
are used to. This is the same as the 5D Mark III, and was difficult to
get used to at first, but you can program the Set button to magnify the
image though, and I have done this on my 5D Mark III and 1D X, which I
find to be a good workaround.
Two CF Card Slots!
I was really happy to hear that the 1D X was to have two CF Card
slots, and not one CF and one SD card slot. Although CF cards are
larger, they are much faster. I put an SD card into my old 1 series
bodies, as a spill over, but this was more of an issue when I used 8GB
cards. Since I now own two 64GB cards and one 128GB CF card, there was
no longer any spill over, and the SD card slot became totally redundant.

Canon EOS 1D X – Two CF Card Slots
Ethernet Port
Another nice addition is the Gigabit Ethernet port for tethered
shooting. BUT, and this is a big BUT, Canon decided that the Mac OS was
not important enough to update the EOS Utility to support Wired shooting
just yet. You can pair the camera with the computer, that part works
fine, but EOS Utility doesn’t work. What’s even more frustrating is that
all through the Canon documentation, it states that you can use EOS
Utility to shoot with the Ethernet connection without any restrictions!
I spent a whole morning trying to get this working, and when I
eventually gave in and called support, I was told it was not yet
supported. When I asked to see where that was stated publicly, I was
lead to a Web page hidden about 5 layers down on the Japan Web site.
You’d never find it until you run into a problem, especially when the
documentation already told you everything was going to be just fine. Oh,
and I couldn’t find a mention of this anywhere on the US Canon Web
site.
I figured I’d try connect to the camera with the WFT Server which is
purported to have a pseudo EOS Utility that works via a Web browser, but
with a tiny LiveView window, no auto-focus and no automatic downloading
of images, it’s a total waste of time.
Canon, I love you guys, you know that, but stop wasting your time
developing crappy applications like the WFT Server on the camera, and
dare I say it, DPP and ImageBrowser could go too, and just concentrate
on supporting the drivers and critical utilities that your customers
need to use your cameras! The Mac OS is important to the photography
community. It always has been, so get your acts together!
OK, rant over, let’s move on…

Canon EOS 1D X Side View
Battery Pack LP-E4N
The 1D X also sports a new battery, the LP-E4N, though you can also
use the LP-E4 that the previous 1 series bodies use. They are both 11.1V
but the LP-E4N is 2450mAh compared to 2300mAh for the LP-E4. I had
heard that the performance of the camera is reduced when using the older
LP-E4 battery packs, but having scoured the Manual, the only reference
to performance is on page 360, and it says “The use of a genuine Canon
Battery Pack LP-E4N or LP-E4 is recommended. If you use any battery
other than the Battery Pack LP-E4N or LP-E4, the camera’s full
performance may not be attained or malfunction may result”. This
suggests to me that there is no degrade in performance when using the
LP-E4, and I have noticed none in my test shooting so far either.
Resolution
If you consider the 1D X an upgrade from the 1D Mark IV, then you
basically gain 2 megapixels with the jump from 16 to 18. The 1D X is now
supposed to be THE flagship in Canon’s DSLR line-up, and it’s a full
frame camera, like the 1Ds Mark III, the previous flagship model, so I
have to admit that I’m slightly disappointed by what is essentially a
drop in resolution.

Canon EOS 1D X Front View
Of course, the 1D line is built for speed, and with a frame rate of
12 frames per second, or 14 fps in JPEG mode, it’s easy to see where the
trade-off is being made here. Even with the increase in frame rate,
Canon were still able to increase the image size by two megapixels over
the 1D Mark IV and increase high ISO performance, so I can live with
this drop.
Besides, I’ll be using the 5D Mark III or even the 1Ds Mark III,
which I have not sold yet when I need maximum megapixels, or two
weatherproofed bodies. I really want to maintain two 1 series bodies for
the times when I need that rugged build and weather proofing, like when
I’m sitting in a Zodiac getting drenched with sea spray in November and
December this year.
Auto-Focus & Metering
The auto-focus on the 1D X has increased focus points over the 1D
Mark IV, jumping from 45 points to 61 in the 1D X. The new auto-focus is
almost the same as the 5D Mark III, which received a huge auto-focus
upgrade compared to the nine point system in the 5D Mark II. Both the 1D
X and 5D Mark III are 61-Point High Density Reticular auto-focus
systems, with 41 cross-type AF points, but the major difference is that
the 1D X has iTR, or Intelligent Tracking and Recognition, which the 5D
Mark III doesn’t have.
Although the 1D X uses dual DIGIC 5+ image processors to process and
pump those 12 frames per second through to the CF card, it uses a DIGIC 4
processor to power the EOS ISA (Intelligent Subject Analysis) which is a
100,000 pixel RGB Metering System. This is used to aid the AF system
with Automatic Point Selection which improves the tracking system when
using AI Servo. What this means is that basically, when you lock on to a
subject in AI Servo mode, the camera uses the color information of your
subject to track it across the frame, switching to other focus points
as necessary. I was hoping that this would provide a magic bullet for
some challenging situations, but that doesn’t appear to be the case, as
we’ll see shortly.
Note that in AI Servo mode it’s not obvious at first, but for you to
enable the camera to use all 61 focus points to track your subject away
from the manually selected focus point that you use to obtain your
initial focus, you have to select the 61 point automatic selection AF
(bottom right in this diagram).

Canon EOS 1D X AF Modes
This is somewhat counter intuitive but although it’s called 61 point
automatic selection auto focus, in AI Servo mode you still have the
ability to move a focus single point around, and that is used to gain
your initial focus. If you conversely select Single-point Spot AF,
Single-point AF or one of the AF point expansion modes the camera will
only use the points or groups of AF points selected, and even in AI
Servo mode it will not shift to the other focus points if the subject
moves away from the selected points or you recompose the image.
So, put simply to use AI Servo and have the camera track your subject
around the frame, select 61-point automatic selection AF and focus with
the center focus point, or move that focus point anywhere you like, and
then half press the shutter button or use the back focus button to
focus, and as long as you hold down the focus button, you can recompose
shot or your subject can move and as long as they stay within the 61
focus point area, the camera will automatically track your subject
around the frame.
AI Servo Focus Accuracy
I was always cautious of using AI Servo focusing full time, as I know
some people that use the back focus button do. I never found AI Servo
focusing to be quite as accurate as One Shot, and so shied away from it
for anything other than moving subjects such as birds in flight. On my
second day out with the 1D X though, I went somewhere that I know
there’d be a good chance of seeing and photographing a Common
Kingfisher.
If you’ve ever tried to photograph a Kingfisher you’ll know that they
don’t hang around when moving from A to B, so I decided to shoot in AI
Servo mode full time, although I could use the button the lens to toggle
between One Shot and AI Servo if necessary. I could quickly tell though
that the ability of the 1D X to attain accurate focus of stationary
objects with AI Servo focusing was spot on.

Common Kingfisher – Stationary
This is probably helped by the 100,000 pixels RGB metering that we
looked at earlier. The AF is no longer just relying on contrast
information, it can actually see that there is a cobalt blue object
amongst the green now. A few seconds after shooting this image though
(above), the kingfisher took flight, and although I lost it with the
narrow field of view of the 600mm lens, I only lost it for a second, and
then caught up with the bird as it stopped to hover for a few seconds
before rocketed off again.
In this next photo you can see the hovering Kingfisher, and this is
something that I’ve never been able to capture before. Even if I see
them do this for a second or so, the camera just takes too long
searching for the subject. Now, I’m pretty sure I stopped focusing for a
split second as I lost the kingfisher from within my finder, but
despite the bird having moved towards me by a few meters, the auto-focus
just snapped straight back in as soon as the kingfisher came into
frame. It was beautiful to watch, from both an aesthetic perspective and
technical one, and the focus is spot on, right on the head of the bird.

Common Kingfisher Hovering
The bird was hovering for literally just a second or so, then it flew
away over to another perch, and was again too fast for me to catch at
its break-neck flight speed, but I bagged a shot that I’m pretty proud
of here. I actually put together a four frame
animated GIF that I posted on Google+, if you want to take a look. It’s quite impressive, if I do say so myself.
https://plus.google.com/u/0/102227359845636175866/posts/L1Hor91K5ny
Here’s one last shot of the Kingfisher before we move on. These are
beautiful little birds and I’m pleased that the 1D X actually enabled me
to get some shots that I actually like of these birds, for the first
time.

Common Kingfisher
AI Servo Tracking Performance
I had a chance to take the 1D X down to the river near to our
apartment too, and there were a few cormorants fishing, then taking off,
circling round up river, then having been swept back by the current,
they’d take off again. This gave me a chance to check the settings that
would help me to continue to track with a bird flying over water, which
is always a problem because when sunlight hits the water, you get little
sparkles of light and contrast that tend to steal the auto-focus from
what would otherwise be a relatively easy to track subject. With a
little trial and error I was able to confirm which AF settings worked
best before hunger and sunburn forced me to leave in the middle of the
afternoon.
I still have some experimenting to do, and of course, you’ll need to
change these settings yourself based on each location you shoot in and
experience as you use the camera, but AF Case 5, for erratic subjects
moving quickly in any direction without any customization worked best
for me with birds over water. I tried a lot of combinations, including
increasing Acceleration/Deceleration Tracking from zero to 1 in Case 5,
and I tried the other cases too, but generally the best settings for
this situation was Case 5 with no adjustments.

Common Cormorant (f/8, 1/1600, ISO 800)
Even using these settings though, if the cormorant flew over a patch
of rough water with higher contrast, the focus would sometimes snap back
to that, and I’d have to release the AF button on the back of the
camera, ensure the bird was in the center of the frame again, and then
refocus. Once I did that, the camera generally stayed with the subject
again, so it seems that choppy water behind birds has not magically
become a non-issue as far as my tests have shown to this point. Against a
clear sky or less choppy water though, the AI Servo was relentless in
tracking the bird with any and all of its 61 focus points.
No Illuminated Focus Point in AI Servo
There is one annoying thing that was fixed in the 1D Mark IV, but is
currently regressed in the 1D X, and that is that the focus point that
has focus is not illuminated as the subject moves around the frame. I
really liked this functionality in the 1D Mark IV, but it’s gone again.
The Canon Rumors Web site says it’s something to do with the red light
affecting the exposure calculation, and that Canon may be working on a
fix, but no details are available as of June 2012.
ISO Tests
OK, so let’s take a look at the insane high ISO performance of the 1D
X. First, here is a range of images from ISO 800 through to 204800 in
full stop increments. I shot from ISO 50 upwards, but ISO’s 50 through
800 are identical, with no grain, so it really wasn’t worth sharing the
first four images. Click on thumbnails and navigate back and forth with
your mouse or keyboard arrow keys.

1DX ISO 800
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1DX ISO 1600
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1DX ISO 3200
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1DX ISO 6400
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1DX ISO 12800
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1DX ISO 25600
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1DX ISO 51200
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1DX ISO 102400
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1DX ISO 204800
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You can see from these examples that if you were shooting for the
Web, you could go as high as ISO 51200 without worrying very much about
ISO at all. Here though is a series of 100% crops of part of the main
sunflower, also including the out of focus sunflower in the background. I
included this second flower, because the out of focus bokeh areas of an
image can often show more grain than the in focus area.
To view this at 100% you’ll need to open your browser window up as to
1280 pixels or wider, and click on a thumbnail, then navigate back and
forth with your mouse or keyboard arrow keys. If you don’t open your
browser window wide enough, the blog will automatically reduce the size
to fit your screen. You’ll still be able to see the grain, but not as
well.

ISO 800 @ 100%
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ISO 1600 @ 100%
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ISO 3200 @ 100%
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ISO 6400 @ 100%
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ISO 12800 @ 100%
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ISO 25600 @ 100%
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ISO 51200 @ 100%
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ISO 102400 @ 100%
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ISO 204800 @ 100%
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You might recall from my 5D Mark III review that based on my tests, I
made ISO 12800 the highest ISO that I would go to without thinking
about grain at all. I also set this as the ISO that my 5D Mark III will
go to when using the Auto ISO mode. At a push though, I told you that
I’d go to ISO 25600 on the 5D3, with the understanding that I’d have to
deal with a bit of grain.
To save going back to the 5D Mark III review to check, and also so
that we can do a direct comparison, I also shot the sunflowers with the
5D Mark III, so here are the 100% crops from the 5D Mark III from ISO
800 to 102400. Note that the 5D Mark III has one stop less ISO than the
1D X, which is why we can’t compare ISO 204800.

5D3 ISO 800 @ 100%
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5D3 ISO 1600 @ 100%
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5D3 ISO 3200 @ 100%
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5D3 ISO 6400 @ 100%
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5D3 ISO 12800 @ 100%
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5D3 ISO 25600 @ 100%
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5D3 ISO 51200 @ 100%
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5D3 ISO 102400 @100%
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OK, so after that reminder of the 5D Mark III ISO performance, let’s
take a look at one last set of ISO images. It’s the same shots that we
just looked at, but I’m going to place the ISOs from 12800 upwards from
both cameras right next to each other, so that you can flick through
them on screen, to see a direct comparison. It seems though that the 1D X
is comparable to one stop lower ISO on the 5D Mark III, so I’m going to
start with the 1D X ISO 12800 image, so that you’ll also be able to
compare the 5D Mark III’s ISO 12800 image directly to the 1D X’s ISO
25600 and so on.

1DX ISO 12800 @ 100%
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5D3 ISO 12800 @ 100%
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1DX ISO 25600 @ 100%
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5D3 ISO 25600 @ 100%
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1DX ISO 51200 @ 100%
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5D3 ISO 51200 @ 100%
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1DX ISO 102400 100%
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5D3 ISO 102400 @100%
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1DX ISO 204800 100%
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As you can see, the 1D X is perhaps even slightly better than one
stop less ISO on the 5D Mark III up to 102400, but I think ISO 204800 on
the 1D X is actually quite a lot better than 102400, the highest ISO on
the 5D Mark III. Of course, this doesn’t mean the 5D Mark III ISO
performance is bad. This is just the trade-off for the extra four
megapixels, and both cameras are still amazing in the high ISOs. This is
a dream compared to what we had just a generation of cameras ago, and
that was a revelation a few years ago too. Things are certainly moving
forward quickly. These cameras can now virtually see in the dark!
Based on these results, I’ve set the Auto-ISO range on my 1D X to a
maximum of 25600, which is where I’ll go without worrying about grain. I
would go to 51200 at a push too, but the expanded ISOs 102400 and
especially 204800 are probably best avoided. This is of course why Canon
set these as Expanded ISOs, which you have to enable before you can
use. With both the 5D Mark III and 1D X they seem to have the limit
exactly where it should be.

Canon EOS 1D X
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Canon EOS 1D X
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Conclusion
OK, so these are the main points that I’ve come across so far. I can
live with the resolution for the frame-rate and high ISO performance
trade-off . I was expecting a larger leap forward in the AI Servo
tracking performance, but I’m very happy with the accuracy of the AI
Servo focusing when it locks on. For my cormorant tests I was working in
very high contrast conditions, and with flowing water in the
background, which has always been very tricky. Considering this, it
performed OK, though I had hoped for a little more.
As I use the camera more I’ll update you in this area, hopefully with
good news that it’s much better in some other situations, but I was
incredibly happy with how the 1D X handled the Kingfisher shoot though,
so there really is not anything to worry about here, but I was a little
more optimistic for some of the more challenging conditions.
All in all though, I am happy with the camera. Is it perfect?
Absolutely not. Is it close? Absolutely! It’s a beautiful piece of
engineering, and I’m looking forward very much to taking it down to
Antarctica for six weeks later this year. I’ll be sharing my photos when
I get back of course, and that will probably be a good time to update
you on the AI Servo too, if I haven’t already done so.
UPDATE: By the
way, for those that weren’t aware of this, Canon didn’t update the 1D X
firmware to allow f/8.0 focusing. The 600mm f/4 lens for example does
not auto-focus with the 2X Extender fitted. On the brighter side though,
the 1D X does perform pretty well with the 600mm and 2X Extender,
probably due to the larger photodiodes and reduced resolution over the
21MP bodies. Here’s a 100% crop of a bull-frog. This is straight out of
camera with Lightroom 4 default processing. It’s not as sharp as I’d
like but this is certainly bordering on usable. With a bit of Clarity
and a little additional sharpening this would brush up OK.

Bullfrog
Via:http://blog.martinbaileyphotography.com