Essentially, the 6D Mark II utilizes the same autofocus system as the Canon 80D, and the AF point spread covers the same area, which is the one primary downside to its inclusion in the 6D IIThe Canon 6D has 11 AF points which is an upgrade from the 5D Mark II’s 9 AF points. However, this is significantly less than the AF points on the 5D Mark III or the 7D. This should work for landscape and macro photography that is mainly manual focus. This could be a drawback for tracking birds and wildlife. Each of the EOS 6D Mark II's 45 AF points is cross type in nature, for extra sensitivity and accuracy. A double cross type point at the centre focuses precisely even under moonlight (-3 EV), so you can be confident of critical sharpness when it matters most. This sensitivity also makes autofocus possible (up to 27 points) with maximum apertures I don't know if I want to be waiting months to receive it. Realistically the R6 will do your kinds of stated photography almost identically to the Mark II. The new improvements are more to video and sports shooting (AF and FPS improvements). I think if you rented an R6 you would want to keep it. Meaning of Lit or Blinking AF Points. Pressing the button lights up the AF points that are cross-type AF points for high-precision autofocusing. The blinking AF points are horizontal-line or vertical-line sensitive. Registering AF Points. You can register the position of a frequently used AF point.
My pictures are OK but I feel there are better options for getting better focus on my shots (they seem fuzzy and a lot are just out of focus). I've got a 5D Mark iii & Canon 70-200 f2.8 IS lens. I shoot manual (this is what I shot most of the night) ISO 10000; f6.3; 1/320; Focus points are the 9 in the middle
Sensor: 24.2MP full-frame Dual Pixel CMOS AF II Image processor: DIGIC X Image stabilization: Up to 8 stops (lens dependent) + Movie Digital IS AF points: 4,897-point Viewfinder: 0.5-inch OLED EVF