List of 4K video recording devices

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of devices which can record video in 4K resolution. As digital video authoring systems could be considered re-recording systems, these should be included.

Professional cameras[]

Sony Handycam FDR-AX1
  • Arri Alexa
  • AH-4413 – released in 2012 and records at 3840×2160 (8.3 megapixels)[1]
  • AXIOM is an open source hardware modular camera that allows users to swap sensors. For research and development the ams Sensors Belgium CMV12000 was used, which allows the camera to record up to 300 fps (10 bit), 132 fps (12 bit) at 4K Resolution[2]
  • Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera 6k
  • Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera 4k
  • Blackmagic URSA
  • Blackmagic Micro Studio Camera 4K
  • Blackmagic Production Camera 4K – announced April 8, 2013[3][4]
  • Canon EOS C500[5] – released in 2012 and records in DCI 4K
  • Dalsa Origin – released in 2003 and records at 4096×2048 (8.3 megapixels). The Dalsa Origin II is no longer available. Dalsa discontinued the Digital Cinema division in 2008. The Origin II was available via a rental-only model similar to Panavision.
  • FOR-A FT-ONE – records 4K at up to 900 FPS
  • JVC GY-HMQ10 – released in 2012 and records at UHD 4K (3840×2160, 8.3 megapixels)
  • Panasonic HC-X1000, 2014 – capable to record in 4K (3840 × 2160) and Cinema 4K (4096 × 2160), 60p/50p, 20× optical zoom, built-in ND filter.
  • Panasonic HC-X1500, 2020
  • Panasonic HC-X2000, 2020
  • Panasonic DVX-200 – 4k 60fps
  • FL3-U3-88S2C-C 8.8 MP Color USB 3.0 – released in 2012 and records at DCI 4K (the framerate is limited to 21 fps)[6]
  • RED EPIC – released in 2011 and records at 5K RAW (5120×2700 13.8 megapixels) & DCI 4K (4096×2160, 8.8 megapixels)
  • RED Scarlet-X – released in November 2011
  • RED ONE – released in 2007 and records at 4096×2304 (11.5 megapixels)
  • Sony F65
  • Sony F5
  • Sony F55
  • Sony VENICE
  • Sony Handycam FDR-AX1[7]
  • Sony XDCAM PXW-Z100[8][9]
  • Vision Research Phantom 65 - no longer in production
  • Vision Research Phantom Flex 4K - records 4K @ up to 1000 FPS - previewed on April 8, 2013[10]

DSLRs and Mirrorless cameras[]

  • Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera 6k
  • Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera 4k
  • Canon EOS-1D C DSLR – Released in 2012 and records at DCI 4K
  • Canon EOS-1D X Mark II – 60p Introduced in Feb 2016
  • Canon EOS-1D X Mark III – First Full Frame Canon DSLR to feature full sensor width 4K readout, and also first Canon camera to record in HEVC codec
  • Canon EOS 5D Mark IV - Full Frame with 4K introduced in August 2016
  • Canon EOS M50
  • Canon EOS 90D – First APS-C Canon DSLR to feature full sensor width 4K readout
  • Canon EOS M6 Mark II
  • Canon EOS R
  • Canon EOS RP
  • Canon EOS R5
  • Canon EOS R6
  • Fujifilm X-A7
  • Fujifilm X-E3
  • Fujifilm X-H1
  • Fujifilm X-T100 – 4K/15p
  • Fujifilm X-T2
  • Fujifilm X-T3 - released in 2018 as the first Fujifilm camera to record in HEVC codec
  • Fujifilm X-T20
  • Fujifilm X-T30
  • Leica CL
  • Leica SL (Typ 601)
  • Leica TL2
  • Nikon D5 - 30p Introduced in Jan 2016
  • Nikon D500 - 30p Introduced in Jan 2016
  • Nikon D7500
  • Nikon D850
  • Nikon 1 J5 (limited to 15 FPS)
  • Panasonic Lumix DMC-G7 - 30 min limit
  • Panasonic Lumix DMC-G85/G80 - No time limit in 4K recording and in body image stabilisation (Europe version has 30 min limit)
  • Panasonic Lumix DC-G9
  • Panasonic Lumix DMC-GH4 – Records in 4K: 4096×2160 / 24p and QFHD (UHD) 4K: 3840×2160 / 25p/30p, up to 100 Mbit/s (IPB), HD (All Intra up to 200 Mbit/s/IPB 100 Mbit/s) only prosumer device with 10-bit hdmi out and no maximum internal 4k recording time limit[11]
  • Panasonic Lumix DC-GH5 - 4K60/50p (4:2:0 8bit) & 4K30/25p/24p (4:2:2 10bit) internal recording, up to 4K60 4:2:2 10bit external recording via HDMI[12]
  • Panasonic Lumix DC-GH5S
  • Panasonic Lumix DMC-GX8 - No time limit in 4K recording and in body image stabilisation (Europe version has 30 min limit)
  • [13]
  • , released 2019
  • , released 2021 – 4K 60fps (200 Mbit/s with HEVC, 150 Mbit/s H.264); DCi 4K at 30fps (150 Mbit/s; 4:2:2 chroma subsampling); [14]
  • Pentax K-3 III - 30p Introduced in March 2021
  • Samsung NX1 - First prosumer camera to record in HEVC, 4K downsampled from 6.5K, 80 Mbit/s in H.265. 30 min max recording time limit
  • Samsung NX500 - Same 28 MP APS-C sensor as NXI but 4K video is not downsampled from 6.5K so less details and more noise than the NX1 - with this 2.4× crop factor the kit lens become a 38–120mm f8.5–13.4 equivalent for depth of field; 15 min max recording time limit
  • Sony α6300 - APS-C camera with internal 4K recording up to 100 Mbit/s. The camera uses a 20 MP (6K) region of the sensor to offer 2.4× oversampled 4K video with full pixel readout, and no .
  • Sony α6400
  • Sony α6500
  • Sony α7 III
  • Sony α7R II - Full Frame 42 Megapixel Sensor, but only 100 Mbit/s in H.264 and the APS-C crop mode is better for 4K than the full frame mode
  • Sony α7R III
  • Sony α7S - 4K: 30p/24p, 4:2:2 8 bits. Does not support internal 4K recording, must use an external recorder via HDMI, but see Sony α7S II. Only 1080p is recorded internally)
  • Sony α7S II - Full Frame with internal 4K recording
  • Sony α9 - XAVC S 4K: 3840 x 2160 (30p/25p/24p), 4:2:0 8bit[15]
  • Sony α99 II

Consumer video cameras[]

  • Canon XC10, 2015
  • Sony Handycam
    • FDR-AX100, 2014
    • FDR-AXP33, 2015, with built-in projector
    • FDR-AX53, 2016
    • FDR-AXP53, 2016, with built-in projector
  • Panasonic
    • HC-WX970, 2015
    • HC-VX870, 2015
    • HC-VXF990, 2016
    • HC-VX980, 2016

Consumer cameras (no interchangeable lens)[]

Mobile devices[]

Below 30 frames per second[]

  • Panasonic Lumix DMC-CM1 – 15 frames per second
  • Acer - The first 4K camera in a mobile device[21] – 24fps

30 frames per second[]

Samsung Mobile
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 (2013)[a] (Snapdragon model) – The first mobile phone with 2160p at 30fps.
  • Samsung Galaxy S5 [a] (2014) – The first Samsung Galaxy S series mobile phone with 2160p video recording
  • Samsung Galaxy Alpha[b]
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 4 (and Samsung Galaxy Note Edge)[a]
  • Samsung Galaxy S6 / Galaxy S6 Edge / Galaxy S6 Edge+[a]
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 5[a]
  • Samsung Galaxy S7 / Galaxy S7 Edge
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 7 / Galaxy Note Fan Edition[c]
  • Samsung Galaxy S8 / Galaxy S8+
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 8[c]
  • Samsung Galaxy A8 Star (2018) – First Galaxy A-series device with 4K recording.
  • Samsung Galaxy A9 (2018)
  • Samsung Galaxy A70
  • Samsung Galaxy A80
  • Samsung Galaxy A90 5G
  • Samsung Galaxy A51 / Galaxy A71
  • Samsung Galaxy M51/Galaxy M31/Galaxy M21
  • Samsung Galaxy F41
  • Samsung Galaxy A52/Galaxy A72
  • Samsung Galaxy F62
  • Samsung Galaxy M62/Galaxy M42 5G
Apple iPhone
  • Apple iPhone 6S / iPhone 6S Plus (2015) – The first iPhones to record in 4K.
  • Apple iPhone SE (2016) – same camera as Apple iPhone 6s
  • Apple iPhone 7 / 7 Plus[22][23]
Google Nexus and Google Pixel
  • Google Nexus 6
  • Google Nexus 6P
  • Google Nexus 5X
  • Google Pixel / Pixel XL
  • Google Pixel 2 / Pixel 2 XL
  • Google Pixel 3 / Pixel 3 XL
  • Google Pixel 3a / Pixel 3a XL
  • Google Pixel 4 / Pixel 4 XL
LG
  • LG G3 (2014) – Earliest known optically stabilized mobile 2160p video camera.
  • LG G4
  • LG G5
  • LG G6
  • LG G Flex (2014) – through subsequent software update[24]
  • LG G Flex 2
  • LG G Pro 2[25]
  • LG V10
  • LG V20
  • LG V30 – 4K HDR (8-bit Log from 10-bit signal, can't record in 10 bit at all.)
  • LG Velvet
Nokia Lumia and Microsoft Lumia
  • Nokia Lumia 930 – through subsequent software update[26][27]
  • Nokia Lumia Icon[26]
  • Nokia Lumia 1520 – through subsequent software update[26][28]
  • Microsoft Lumia 950
  • Microsoft Lumia 950 XL
Motorola
  • Motorola Moto X (2nd generation)[29]
  • Motorola Moto X Style
  • Motorola Droid Turbo
  • Motorola Nexus 6[30]
OnePlus and Oppo
  • OnePlus One – the first mobile device to support recording at both 4096 × 2160@24fps (DCi-4K or Full4K) and 3840 × 2160@30fps
  • OnePlus 2
  • OnePlus 3
  • OnePlus 3T
  • OnePlus 5
  • OnePlus 5T
  • OnePlus 6
  • OnePlus 6T
  • OnePlus 7 and 7 Pro
  • OnePlus 7T and 7T Pro
  • Oppo Find 7/7a
Sony Xperia
  • Sony Xperia Z Ultra
  • Sony Xperia Z1 and Z1 Compact
  • Sony Xperia Z2
  • Sony Xperia Z3 and Z3 Compact
  • Sony Xperia Z4 and
  • Sony Xperia Z5, Z5 Premium and Z5 Compact
  • Sony Xperia M5
  • Sony Xperia XZ / XZ Dual and XZs
  • Sony Xperia XZ Premium, XZ1 and XZ1 Compact
  • Sony XPeria XZ2, XZ2 Premium, XZ3 and XZ2 Compact – World's first "4K HDR" recording on a phone. Can be deactivated optionally.
  • Sony Xperia 1 and 5
  • Sony Xperia 1 II
Xiaomi
  • Xiaomi Mi 3 (using unofficial/modded software)
  • Xiaomi Mi 4[31]
  • and Mi 5s
  • Xiaomi Mi 8
  • Xiaomi Mi 9,
  • Xiaomi Mi 9T and Mi 9T Pro
  • Xiaomi Mi 10
  • Xiaomi Mi 10T and Mi 10T Pro
  • Xiaomi Mi A1
  • Xiaomi Mi A2
  • Xiaomi Mi A3
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (Snapdragon model)
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (using third party camera apps)
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 5
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 7
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 8
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 9 Pro
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 10 pro
  • Xiaomi Poco X3 NFC
  • Xiaomi Poco F1
  • / Redmi K30 Pro
Huawei
  • Huawei P10 and P10 Plus
  • Huawei P20 and P20 Pro
  • Huawei Mate 9, Mate 9 Pro and Mate 9 Porsche Design edition
  • Huawei Mate 10, Mate 10 Pro and Mate 10 Porsche Design edition
Other vendors

Vendors with only few listed devices

  • BlackBerry Priv[32]
  • HTC One M9[d]
  • HTC 10
  • Lenovo Vibe Z2 Pro
  • Meizu MX4 Pro
  • Meizu MX4

60 frames per second[]

Samsung Mobile
  • Samsung Galaxy S9 / Galaxy S9+ - Capable of recording at 4K@60[a] or 30fps with official support from Samsung.
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 9 - Capable of recording at 4K@60[a] or 30fps with official support from Samsung.
  • Samsung Galaxy S10e / Galaxy S10 / Galaxy S10+ / Galaxy S10 5G / Galaxy S10 Lite
  • Samsung Galaxy S20 / Galaxy S20+ / Galaxy S20 Ultra / Galaxy S20 5G / Galaxy S20+ 5G / Galaxy S20 Ultra 5G - First phone to record 8K resolution at 24fps
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 10 / Galaxy Note 10+ / Galaxy Note 10 5G / Galaxy Note 10+ 5G
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 20 / Galaxy Note 20 Ultra / Galaxy Note 20 5G / Galaxy Note 20 Ultra 5G
Apple iPhone
  • Apple iPhone 8 / iPhone 8 Plus and iPhone X, 4K@60, 30 or 24fps with official support from Apple.
  • Apple iPhone XS / iPhone XS Max and iPhone XR
  • Apple iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro / iPhone 11 Pro Max
  • Apple iPhone SE (2nd generation) - same camera as iPhone 8
  • Apple iPhone 12 / iPhone 12 Mini and iPhone 12 Pro / iPhone 12 Pro Max
Asus
  • Asus Zenfone 5Z
  • Asus Zenfone 6
  • Asus ROG Phone II
  • Asus ROG Phone III
Huawei
  • Huawei P30 and P30 Plus
  • Huawei P40 P40 Pro and P40 Pro+
  • Huawei Mate 20, Mate 20 Pro and Mate 20X
  • Huawei Mate 30 and Mate 30 Pro
  • Huawei Mate 40
LG
  • LG G7 ThinQ
  • LG G8 ThinQ
  • LG G8X ThinQ
  • LG G8S ThinQ
  • LG V40
  • LG V50
  • LG V60
Xiaomi
  • Xiaomi Mi 10 5G
  • Xiaomi Mi 10T and Mi 10T Pro
  • Poco F1
  • Poco F2 Pro / Redmi K30 Pro
OnePlus
  • OnePlus 6 & 6T
  • OnePlus 7, 7T & 7Pro
  • OnePlus 8, 8T
Realme(4k@60fps)

Realme GT Neo/Realme GT Realme X3 Superzoom

120 frames per second[]

Sony Xperia
  • Sony Xperia 5 II
  • Sony Xperia 5 III

Rugged Compact Cameras[]

Wearable cameras[]

  • GoPro HERO3 Black Edition (2012) – 4K (15 fps) and DCI 4K (12 fps), fixed "Ultra Wide" Field of view
  • GoPro HERO3+ Black Edition (slim) - , 4K (15 fps) and DCI 4K (12 fps), fixed "Ultra Wide" field of view
  • GoPro HERO4 (2015) - 4k at up to 30fps (black edition)
  • GoPro HERO5 (2016) - 4k at up to 30fps (black edition) and added a USB-C Port and Touchscreen
  • GoPro HERO6 (2017) - 4k at up to 60fps (black edition) and improved EIS (Electronic Image Stabilization)
  • GoPro HERO7 (2017) - 4k at up to 60fps (black edition), HyperSmooth (advanced image stabilization) at 30fps and improved EIS (Electronic Image Stabilization) at 60fps
  • Nikon KeyMission 170 - 4K at 30fps
  • (2015) - 4k at up to 60fps and EIS (Electronic Image Stabilization) at 4k 30fps
  • Sony actioncam FDR-X3000R
  • RealAction Pro[33]

See also[]

  • 1080p Full HD – digital video format with a resolution of 1920 × 1080
  • List of 4K video recording devices
  • 2K resolution – digital video formats with a horizontal resolution of around 2,000 pixels
  • 5K resolution – digital video formats with a horizontal resolution of around 5,000 pixels, aimed at non-television computer monitor usage
  • 8K resolution – digital video formats with a horizontal resolution of around 8,000 pixels
  • 10K resolution – digital video formats with a horizontal resolution of around 10,000 pixels
  • 16K resolution – experimental VR format
  • Aspect ratio (image) – proportional relationship between an image's width and height
  • Digital cinema
  • Graphics display resolution
  • High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) – video standard that supports 4K & 8K UHDTV and resolutions up to 8192 × 4320
  • Rec. 2020 – ITU-R recommendation for UHDTV, defining formats with resolutions of 4K (3840 × 2160) and 8K (7680 × 4320)
  • Ultra-high-definition television (UHDTV) – various standards for high-resolution television
  • Ultrawide formats
  • 4K resolution

Notes[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Limited to 5 minutes each 4K video
  2. ^ Limited to 4 minutes each 4K video
  3. ^ a b Limited to 10 minutes each 4K video
  4. ^ Limited to 6 minutes each 4K video

References[]

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  14. ^ Baskin, Dale; Rose, Carey; Keller, Jeff (2021-03-11). "Panasonic Lumix DC-S5 review". DPReview. Digital Photography Review. p. 6. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
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  26. ^ a b c microsoft.com - FAQ - Which features does my Lumia phone support?
  27. ^ "Microsoft announces Lumia Denim update, available Q4 2014". GSMArena.com. 2014-09-04. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
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External links[]

Articles[]

Official sites of NHK[]

Video[]


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