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It can record fully spherical 360-degree stills at 24 megapixels and 4K video with no blind spots. The KeyMission has a pair of image sensors and f/2 wide-angle lenses on either side of its shockproof body. While it can’t record 4K, it does support full HD recording at up to 60 fps and 16-megapixel still capture. It has a built-in 150-lumen LED light to help you bring the murky deep into focus. The X2 dives way deeper than just about any action camera on the market, with an integrated housing that can descend up to 330 feet underwater. You can control up to five RX0s using Sony’s PlayMemories mobile app. The RX0 can be rigged up with other RX0s in an accessory housing for shooting virtual reality. You can dunk the RX0 in up to 33 feet of water without a housing and it’s shock- and dust-proof, too. You’ll also get high frame rate HD recording, up to 250 fps, plus Sony’s Slog2 color profile and time code. While it can’t record 4K video internally, it does support clean HDMI output for sending a 4K signal to an external recorder. First, it has a 1-inch, 15-megapixel image sensor, much larger than the 1/2.3-inch sensors typically found in action cameras. While it has the shape and durability of an action camera, the RX0 has the guts of a cinema camera.
You can film full HD videos at 60p and shoot bursts at 10 fps. New for Fuji cameras is a Cinemagraph mode that creates still images with moving elements. It’s equipped with a 16-megapixel back-illuminated CMOS sensor, a 3-inch display and a fixed 5x optical zoom lens (28mm-140mm, 35mm equivalent) with optical image stabilization. Low cost and lightweight, the XP120 is waterproof to a depth of 65 feet and can survive falls from 5.7 feet. Plus, there’s optical image stabilization to keep your footage steady even if you’re bobbing on the waves. A torch light function activates a small video light to improve visibility underwater. It features a 16-megapixel image sensor and a 29-108mm (equivalent) lens. Ready for the elements, the TS30 can dive under 26 feet of water and survive falls from 4.9 feet high. Like most waterproof cameras, the X-U has an underwater shooting mode to correct color shifts, but unlike many waterproof models, this mode has its own shutter button to instantly shoot an image with the mode activated. It features a built-in Summilux 23mm f/1.7 ASPH lens with a 35mm-equivalent field of view. It can dive up to 49 feet underwater for up to 60 minutes and survive a drop from up to 4 feet. It features a 16-megapixel APS-C-sized CMOS sensor housed in a waterproof, dust-proof and shock-proof body. The X-U is Leica’s first waterproof and durable compact. It features a max ISO of 12,800 and can capture RAW still image files. The TG-5 can record 4K/30p video, full HD up to 120 fps and 4K time-lapse movies. Beyond its intelligent interior, the TG-5 is built to dive up to 50 feet underwater, withstand 220 pounds of force, falls from 7 feet and temperatures down to 14☏. You can also check this data on the camera’s 3-inch display, even when the camera is powered off.
Thanks to the camera’s built-in Wi-Fi, this data can be relayed to smartphones and displayed alongside your stills and video on the Olympus Image Track App. The camera’s Field Sensor System features a GPS sensor, manometer, compass and temperature sensor. What sets the TG-5 apart from its action cam competitors is a series of sensors to record data-either simultaneously, with video or independently. Like the HERO5, the 6 features a touch display and is waterproof to a depth of 33 feet without a housing.
The HERO6 can automatically send videos to your phone where the GoPro app will automatically edit them, add effects and spit out your own highlight reel. There’s also a new touch zoom (digital zoom) feature and a faster Wi-Fi connection. GoPro improved the electronic image stabilization in the camera, too, stabilizing across six axes versus four on the HERO5. You can record 4K video at up to 60p, 2.7K-resolution video at 120p and 1080 HD video at up to 240p. GoPro is synonymous with action cameras, and the new HERO6 ups the ante with high frame rate 4K recording and a new processing chip that delivers better dynamic range, color reproduction and low-light performance than the HERO5.