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  1. Table of Contents
  2. Top
  3. Main Differences
  4. Design
    1. Portability
    2. Build Quality
    3. Body
    4. In The Box
    5. Ergonomics & Comfort
    6. Viewfinder
    7. Screen
    8. Menu System
    9. Built-In Lens
    10. Sensor
    11. Battery
  5. Photo General
    1. Photo Shooting Speed
    2. Photo AF-C Tracking
    3. Photo AF-C Center Point
    4. Photo Image Stabilization
  6. Photo Image Quality
    1. Photo RAW Dynamic Range
    2. Photo RAW Sharpness
    3. Photo RAW Noise
  7. Pictures Sample Gallery
    1. The Skate Park Picture
    2. The Polish Church Picture
    3. The Studio Picture
    4. The Stairway Picture
  8. Video General
    1. Video Features
    2. Audio
    3. Video File Format And Compression
  9. 4k Video
    1. 4k Video Frame Rate
    2. 4k Video Internal Recording
    3. 4k Video Autofocus Performance
    4. 4k Video Quality
    5. 4k Video Rolling Shutter Effect
  10. Full HD Video
    1. FHD Video Frame Rate
    2. FHD Video Internal Recording
    3. FHD Video Autofocus Performance
    4. FHD Video Quality
    5. FHD Video Rolling Shutter Effect
  11. Video Image Quality
    1. Video Dynamic Range
    2. Luminosity Patch Detection
  12. Storage And Connectivity
    1. Storage
    2. Inputs / Outputs
  13. Comments

Sony α6400 vs Canon EOS R10

Side-by-Side Comparison

Products

Sony α6400
Canon EOS R10

Tested using Methodology v0.13

Updated Dec 11, 2024 04:12 PM

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Tested using Methodology v0.13

Updated Feb 20, 2025 05:53 PM

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Sony α6400 Picture
Canon EOS R10 Picture

Variants

  • a6400 (Black W/16-50mm Lens)
  • a6400 (Black (Body Only))
  • EOS R10 (Black (Body Only))
  • EOS R10 (Black W/ 18-45mm Lens)
  • EOS R10 (Content Creator Kit) (Black W/ 18-45mm Lens)

Our Verdict

Sony α6400

Canon EOS R10

The Sony α6400 and the Canon EOS R10 each have their advantages. The Sony's weather-sealed rangefinder-style body is more compact, can be recharged via USB-C without needing an additional power adapter, and has a larger photo buffer. Meanwhile, the R10 has a faster continuous shooting speed and a more robust range of video recording functionality: it can shoot uncropped 4k at 30 fps or cropped 4k at 60 fps. While only the Sony supports Log recording, it's limited to 8-bit color depth. You can contrast that with the Canon's HDR PQ profile, which allows for 10-bit 4:2:2 internal recording. The Canon's fully articulated display is also fully touch-sensitive and can be used to navigate its far more intuitive menu system.

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