The Canon EOS 750D, known as the Rebel T6i in the Americas or as the Kiss X8i in Japan, is a 24.2 megapixels entry-mid-level digital SLR announced by Canon on February 6, 2015. As a part of the Canon EOS three-digit/Rebel line, it is the successor to the EOS 700D.
The 750D was announced and released together with the 760D, a very similar model which adopts some of the ergonomic features of the more expensive 70D.
24.2 effective megapixel APS-C CMOS sensor19 AF points, all cross-type at f/5.6. Center point is high precision, double cross-type at f/2.8 or fasterDIGIC 6 image processor with 14-bit processingHybrid CMOS AF IIIISO 100 – 12800 (expandable to H: 25600)95% viewfinder frame coverage with 0.82x magnification1080p Full HD video recording at 24p, 25p (25 Hz) and 30p (29.97 Hz) with drop frame timing720p HD video recording at 60p (59.94 Hz) and 50p (50 Hz)480p ED video recording at 30p and 25p5.0 frames per second continuous shooting3.0" (7.7 cm) vari-angle Clear View II LCD touchscreen with 1,040,000 dots resolution.3.5 mm microphone jack for external microphones or recordersWi-Fi + NFC connectivity"Anti-flicker" (introduced on the EOS 7D Mk II) – the camera can be set to automatically delay the moment of exposure to compensate for flickering electric lightingThe 750D was announced together with the EOS 760D (known as the Rebel T6s in the Americas and the 8000D in Japan). It is very similar to the 750D, but adds the following features:
A LCD information display on top of the body, a feature never before available in the EOS xxxD/Rebel digital line. The last previous consumer-level body with an LCD display was the 35mm film-era EOS 3000N/Rebel XS N.A quick control dial on the rear of the body, also a first for the xxxD/Rebel digital line.Servo AF (autofocus) in live view mode, allowing for continuous autofocus during shooting bursts. (The 750D/T6i only supports Servo AF when using the optical viewfinder.) Both 750D and 760D camera uses advance Hybrid CMOS AF III sensor and a 19 point AF phase module sensor, The Hybrid Sensor AF system gets activated when a users switch to live view shooting or records a video. All of the current Canon EF Lenses are compatible with the Canon latest Hybrid AF sensor and will do AF perfectly without an issue.On May 8, 2015, Canon USA confirmed a sensor issue on some 750D and 760D cameras which resulted in the appearance of dark circular patterns on the captured image under certain shooting conditions. Canon provided instructions on how to identify potentially affected cameras and offered free repair to any affected camera.