Canon EOS 6D Mark II User Manual Page 345

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3 Setting the Movie Recording Quality
Even if you shoot a movie exceeding 4 GB, you can keep shooting
without interruption (except the time-lapse movie shooting).
Using SD/SDHC cards
formatted with the camera
If you use the camera to format an SD/SDHC card, the camera
will format it in FAT32.
With a FAT32-formatted card, if you shoot a movie and the file
size exceeds 4 GB, a new movie file will be created automatically.
When you play back the movie, you will have to play back each
movie file individually. Movie files cannot be played back
automatically in consecutive order. After the movie playback ends,
select the next movie and play it back.
Using SDXC cards
formatted with the camera
If you use the camera to format an SDXC card, the camera will
format it in exFAT.
When using an exFAT-formatted card, even if the file size exceeds
4 GB during movie shooting, the movie will be saved as a single
file (rather than being split into multiple files).
The maximum recording time of one movie clip is 29 min. 59 sec. If the
movie shooting time reaches 29 min. 59 sec., the movie shooting will
stop automatically. You can start shooting a movie again by pressing
the <0> button. (The movie will be recorded as a new movie file.)
Movie Files Exceeding 4 GB
Movie Shooting Time Limit
When downloading movie files exceeding 4 GB to a computer, use either
the EOS Utility (p.594) or a card reader (p.599). Movie files exceeding
4 GB will not be downloaded if you perform image download with the
computer’s operating system.
For 4K time-lapse movie shooting (p.350), using an SDXC card is
recommended.
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