Make Your Films Great: Canon C80 vs Sony FX6 vs Red Komodo-X. Which is the Best Camera for Filmmakers?


Your camera can make or break your film career. I compare the Canon C80, Sony FX6, and Red Komodo-X to find out which camera is best for your next project.

In this article I’ll compare three power-packed cinema cameras in roughly similar price brackets. There will be only one winner.

Here are the cameras compared:

  1. Sony FX6 (AmazonB&H)
  2. Canon EOS C80 (AmazonB&H)
  3. Red Komodo-X

The camera body

Here’s how much the base camera body costs:

CameraPrice of Camera Body
Sony FX6$5,998
Canon EOS C80$5,499
Red Komodo-X$6,995

It would be in your best interest to feel out the after sales and service in your country prior to committing to any camera. No point buying a camera and then having to tear your hair out when you realize you have to ship your camera overseas for repair.

The price of the camera body is misleading, because not every camera on this list is ready to shoot. Some need a few accessories to get even. We’re going to look at this, too.

Remember, only one winner!

Comparison of sensors and video features

Sensor performance

Here’s how the camera sensors compare:

CameraMaximum ResolutionSensor Size
Sony FX64096 x 216035.7 x 18.8 mm
Canon EOS C806008 x 317036.0 x 19.0 mm
Red Komodo-X6144 x 324027.03 x 14.26 mm

The Red Komodo-X is a Super 35mm camera, while the others are full frame cameras.

The Canon EOS C80 (AmazonB&H) has a definite advantage here, because you get all of these four options:

Camera6K Full Frame4K Full Frame4K Super 354K Anamorphic
Sony FX6NoYesNoNo
Canon EOS C80YesYesYesYes
Red Komodo-XNoNoYesNo

Let’s dig deeper:

CameraDynamic Range*Built-in NDShutter
Sony FX6#15+ stopsYes, 2-7 stopsRolling
Canon EOS C8016 stopsYes, 2, 4 and 6 (8 & 10)^ stopsRolling
Red Komodo-X16.5+ stopsNoGlobal
#The Sony FX6 has 15+ stops dynamic range with 10% crop.
*You can’t compare these dynamic range numbers directly because almost all of them fudge the numbers. None of these cameras beat the Arri Alexa LF with 14+ stops of dynamic range – not where it matters anyway!
^8 and 10 through using two NDs at the same time (6+2) and (6+4). Canon calls this extended mode.
CameraISO RangeBase ISO
Sony FX6800 to 409,600800 / 12800
Canon EOS C80100 to 102,400800 / 3200 / 12800
Red Komodo-X250 to 12,800800

The Sony FX6 (AmazonB&H) is probably the best camera for low light. The USP of the Red Komodo-X is that it is the only camera with a global shutter, same as the Red Komodo which costs less. However, it is severely lacking without built-in ND filters.

Frame rates

Let’s look at frame rates:

CameraMax fps at 6KMax fps at 4KMax fps at 1080p
Sony FX6N/A3840 x 2160 @ 120 fps*1920 x 1080 @ 120 fps**
Canon EOS C806000 x 3164 @ 30 fps4368 x 2304 @ 120 fps^2048 x 1080 @ 180 fps^
Red Komodo-X6144 x 3240 @ 80 fps
5120 x 2700 @ 96 fps
4096 x 2160 @ 120 fps2048 x 1080 @ 240 fps
*In XAVC-S/L mode only, in UHD, not 4K DCI. In XAVC-I the maximum frame rate is 60 fps.
**The FX6 can do higher frame rates but less than 1080p resolution.
^Only in Long-GOP, not in Intra-frame. For intraframe, the maximum frame rate is 60 fps.

The Red Komodo-X seems to be the most versatile camera for high frame rate recording. Even though the others shoot 120 fps in 4K, it’s in Long-GOP and not intraframe or RAW.

Codecs

CameraInternal RAWExternal RAW*Bit depth for RAWOther Codecs
Sony FX6No RAWProRes RAW via HDMI16-bit^XAVC-I
Canon EOS C80Cinema RAW LightNo12-bitXF-AVC, H.265/H.264
Red Komodo-XRedcode RAWNo12-bitProRes HQ to 4444 XQ
*Externally using an Atomos Ninja V recorder
^Disregard the 16-bit bit depth on the Sony FX6, it’s probably just 12-bit rewrapped. It’s unlikely you’ll get true 16-bit for this price.

The Red Komodo-X wins this one because of the popularity of Redcode RAW and the options that it gives for ProRes.

What you get externally:

CameraConnectionBest resolution and fpsAudio
Sony FX612G SDI x1, HDMI x14264 x 2408 @ 60fps | UHD @120 fps^2x XLR
Canon EOS C8012G SDI x1, HDMI x14096 x 2160p @ 60fps2x Mini XLR
Red Komodo-X12G SDI4096 x 2160p @ 60fps5-Pin port
^120 fps requires an Atomos Ninja V+ recorder

One of the important distinctions of a cinema camera is the availability of additional SDI/HDMI ports for monitoring and recording.

In this regard the Sony FX6 (AmazonB&H) wins because it has regular size XLR ports.

Lenses

CameraMountsPrice for PL mount*
Sony FX6Sony E$549
Canon EOS C80Canon RF$494
Red Komodo-XCanon RF$494
*Wooden Camera adapters. However, Canon has its own adapter that supports metadata. It don’t know if it will work with the C80 at the time of this writing.

I don’t think you’ll be restricted by the lens mount, if your goal is to end up with PL glass you need to understand how the pricing changes. Some cameras have separate mounts you need to purchase and swap as needed, others don’t. For the latter you need adapters instead.

If you don’t need PL, then maybe autofocus is something you’re considering. In that case the Canon EOS C80 (AmazonB&H) is your best bet.

Autofocus performance

CameraContinuous Autofocus
Sony FX6 Phase Detection AF with Eye Tracking
Canon EOS C80Dual Pixel CMOS AF
Red Komodo-XPhase Detect and Contrast

The Dual Pixel CMOS autofocus by Canon wins hands down giving this round to the Canon EOS C80 (AmazonB&H).

Monitoring and ergonomics

Weight and size

Let’s look at the weight and size:

CameraVolume (size)Weight (Body Only)
Sony FX6123 cubic inches890g
Canon EOS C80156 cubic inches1.31 kg
Red Komodo-X78 cubic inches1.19 kg

The Sony FX6 (AmazonB&H) impresses with the number of features that it has packed in a relatively lighter body. The C80 is larger and heavier than the C70, and the FX6.

What about the LCD monitor? Some of the cameras have a monitor you can watch your footage on, and this is handy in a pinch. For serious monitoring, though, you need an external monitor that’s at least 5″, and none of the cameras have that.

All the cameras can be operated without a dedicated monitor or viewfinder.

CameraMonitor
Sony FX63.5” touchscreen
Canon EOS C803.5” touchscreen
Red Komodo-X2.9″ touchscreen

The monitors on the Sony FX6 (AmazonB&H) and Canon EOS C80 (AmazonB&H) can swivel in any direction. The screen on the Komodo-X is fixed.

Media and Batteries

Media

Here’s a look at the media options:

CameraCard slotsPrice (Price per GB)
Sony FX62x CFexpress Type A, SD card$648 ($2/GB)*
Canon EOS C802 x SD UHS-II$200 ($0.78/GB)**
Red Komodo-X1 x CFexpress Type B$800 ($0.39)^
* For a Sony 320GB CFexpress Type A TOUGH Card
** For a 256GB Sandisk Extreme Pro Card
^ RED DIGITAL CINEMA 2TB PRO CFexpress 2.0 Type B Memory Card

The Canon EOS C80 (AmazonB&H) is definitely the best option, though there’s nothing wrong with the single card on the Komodo-X.

CameraBest Internal CodecData rate*Cost per 4 hours
Sony FX6XAVC-I75 MB/s$2,109
Canon EOS C80Cinema RAW Light72 MB/s$790
Red Komodo-XRedcode RAW560 MB/s, 168 MB/s^$921
*In the highest resolution and best compression setting.
^In 8:1 setting or MQ compression. 560 MB/s is at 80 fps in HQ.

Even though the Komodo-X uses cheaper media, the data rate is more than twice the other two cameras, and the final cost is higher.

What about battery life?

Batteries and Power

CameraBatteryPower DrawBattery Voltage
Sony FX6Sony BP-U7018 W19.5V
Canon EOS C80Canon BP-A30N14.5 W14.4V
Red Komodo-XMicro V-LockN/A14.4V

Now all we have to do is find the battery life and cost of operation for 6 hours of a day’s worth of work.

Here are the numbers:

CameraBattery lifeWatt hoursCostCost of 6 hours of operation
Sony FX6210 mins72 Wh$310$531
Canon EOS C80170 mins45 Wh$285$604
Red Komodo-X180 min98 Wh$325$650

I think the battery life is close enough, with Red having the edge due to the availability of Micro-V Lock batteries from many manufacturers.

Time to sum up everything.

Which is cheaper to own?

It’s important to add accessories to put all cameras on an even keel:

CameraSony FX6Canon EOS C80Red Komodo-X
Camera body$5,998$5,499$6,995
Cost of Media$2,109$790$921
Cost of Batteries$531$604$650
Lens Adapter to PL$549$494$494
Total$9,187$7,387$9,060

The use of CFExpress Type A continues to hurt Sony, as the prices haven’t gone down. If you take that out of the equation, the FX6 is really good value for money.

But money isn’t the only selection criterion. If the Komodo-X costs $1,673 more than the Canon C80, is that that much better? Let’s find out.

Verdict

First, a recap:

FeatureWinner
Sensor, ISO and FormatsCanon C80
Low LightSony FX6
MotionRed Komodo-X
Built-in ND filtersCanon C80
Frame RatesRed Komodo-X
CodecsRed Komodo-X
SDI and XLRSony FX6
Variety of LensesTie
AutofocusCanon C80
MediaCanon C80
ErgonomicsTie
Battery lifeTie
Battery CompatibilityRed Komodo-X

I interact with thousands of filmmakers every year, and I can tell you: practical cinematography in the real world doesn’t really warrant anything better than what any of these cameras are capable of producing.

The limitation will always be the cinematography and production values.

Before we take our final decision, we’ll let each camera tell us what it offers that the other doesn’t:

CameraUSPMajor Cons
Sony FX6Low light, AF, E-mount lenses, 4K 120 fps externally, ND filter, XLR inputs, production ready ergonomics, worldwide availability and supportNo RAW internally, no locking lens mount, due for an upgrade
Canon EOS C80Value for money, any cinema mode possible in 4K, ND filters, AF, SD cards, Triple Base ISOMini-XLR inputs
Red Komodo-XGlobal shutter, High frame rates, batteries, Internal compressed RAWNo XLR, no ND filter

I promised one winner. The Red Komodo-X seems great, but really it loses out for these reasons:

  • No built-in ND filters
  • No XLR inputs
  • Hard to buy and service in many places
  • Too expensive for slightly higher frame rates and a global shutter
  • Uncertain future under Nikon

The winner of this comparison is the Canon EOS C80 (AmazonB&H).

Canon have provided incredible value and have priced it accordingly. It’s only true comparison is with the Canon C400, the sensor of which it shares. Read that comparison here:

What do you think? Let me know in the comments below.

Author Bio
Photo of author
Sareesh Sudhakaran is a film director and award-winning cinematographer with over 24 years of experience. His second film, "Gin Ke Dus", was released in theaters in India in March 2024. As an educator, Sareesh walks the talk. His online courses help aspiring filmmakers realize their filmmaking dreams. Sareesh is also available for hire on your film!

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4 thoughts on “Make Your Films Great: Canon C80 vs Sony FX6 vs Red Komodo-X. Which is the Best Camera for Filmmakers?”

  1. Sareesh,
    Thank you for the in-depth breakdown of the features of all three cameras. Since the announcement of the Canon C80 and the price drop of the Red Komodo X, I’ve been on the fence. I already have a C70, and was thinking that the C80 would pair good with it when the job calls for it. But then, I keep hearing how nice the picture quality the Komodo X produces. Is there really that much of a difference in picture quality between the Komodo and the C80 in your opinion? As you pointed out, the C80 has the ability to shoot Super 35, Full Frame, and Anamorphic. That opens up more options for creativity. Even if the Komodo has a slightly better picture, it appears that the C80 is the best choice for all the reasons you stated in your article. Thoughts? Thanks again for your review.

    Reply

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