Head to head · specs cited · drawn to scale
Sony A6100 vs Sony ZV-E10 II
Every spec below is quoted from the makers' official pages — where a figure isn't published we say so rather than guess. Sizes are drawn at true relative scale from published dimensions, and the bag-fit row is computed against our measured bag catalog.
The 3 biggest published differences
- Battery life (CIPA): the ZV-E10 II leads at Approx. 610 shots (LCD monitor) vs the A6100's Approx. 380 shots (Viewfinder) / Approx. 420 shots (LCD monitor).
- Weight (body): the ZV-E10 II leads at 292 g vs the A6100's 396 g.
- Resolution (MP): the ZV-E10 II leads at 26.0 vs the A6100's 24.2.
| Overview | ||
|---|---|---|
| Type | Mirrorless | Mirrorless |
| Format | APS-C | APS-C |
| Lens mount | Sony E | Sony E |
| Released | —, not published | —, not published |
| Sensor & Image | ||
| Sensor type | APS-C type (23.5 x 15.6mm), Exmor CMOS sensor | APS-C type (23.3 x 15.5 mm), Exmor R CMOS sensor |
| Sensor size | APS-C | APS-C |
| Resolution (MP) | 24.2 | 26.0 |
| In-body stabilisation | none | none |
| ISO range | 100 | 100 |
| Autofocus & Speed | ||
| AF system | Fast Hybrid AF (phase-detection AF/contrast-detection AF) | Fast Hybrid AF (phase-detection AF / contrast-detection AF) |
| Subject detection | 425 points (phase-detection AF) / 425 points (contrast-detection AF); Eye AF Still images (Human Right/Left Eye Select) | Human, Animal, Bird; Still images: Max. 759 points (phase-detection AF) |
| Burst — mechanical | 11 | —, not published |
| Burst — electronic | —, not published | 11 |
| Video | ||
| Max video | 4K (3840 x 2160) up to 30p | 4K (3840 x 2160) up to 59.94p (XAVC HS, 10-bit 4:2:2) |
| Codecs / sampling | XAVC S, AVCHD | XAVC S (MPEG-4 AVC/H.264), XAVC HS (MPEG-H HEVC/H.265) |
| Recording limit | —, not published | —, not published |
| Viewfinder & Screen | ||
| EVF resolution | 1,440,000 dots | —, not published |
| EVF magnification | Approx. 1.07x (35mm camera equivalent: Approx. 0.70x) with 50mm lens at infinity, -1m-1 | —, not published |
| Rear screen | 7.5cm (3.0-type) wide type TFT, 921,600 dots | 7.5 cm (3.0-type) type TFT, 1,036,800 dots |
| Body & Handling | ||
| Dimensions (W×H×D) | 120 × 66.9 × 59.4 mm | 114.8 × 67.5 × 54.2 mm |
| Weight (body) | 396 g | 292 g |
| Weather sealing | —, not published | —, not published |
| Shutter durability | —, not published | —, not published |
| Power & Storage | ||
| Battery life (CIPA) | Approx. 380 shots (Viewfinder) / Approx. 420 shots (LCD monitor) | Approx. 610 shots (LCD monitor) |
| Battery | NP-FW50 | NP-FZ100 |
| Card slots | 1 (Multi slot for Memory Stick Duo/SD memory card) | 1 (Slot for SD UHS-I/II compliant memory card) |
| Connectivity | ||
| USB | Multi/Micro USB Terminal | USB Type-C Terminal (SuperSpeed USB 5 Gbps / USB 3.2 compatible) |
| Wireless | Wi-Fi IEEE 802.11b/g/n (2.4GHz band), Bluetooth Standard Ver. 4.1 (2.4GHz band) | Wi-Fi IEEE 802.11a/b/g/n/ac (2.4GHz band/5GHz band), Bluetooth Standard Ver. 4.2 (2.4GHz band) |
| HDMI | HDMI micro connector (Type-D) | HDMI micro connector (Type-D) |
| Price | ||
| Launch price | —, not published | —, not published |
| Size, to scale | ||
Front view, drawn at the same scale from each maker's published W×H (mm). | ||
| Smallest bag that fits | ||
| Body + standard zoom | Tenba BYOB 9 Camera Insert Fits with 24-105 f/4 · View at B&H Photo Video | Think Tank Mirrorless Mover 20 V2 Fits with 24-105 f/4 · View at B&H Photo Video |
Sources
“Number Of Pixels (Effective): Approx. 24.2 megapixels. Continuous Drive Speed (approx. max.): Continuous shooting: Hi+: 11 fps, Hi: 8 fps, Mid: 6 fps, Lo: 3 fps. Image Stabilization Type: Not supported (image stabilisation supported on lens).”
“NUMBER OF PIXELS (EFFECTIVE): Still images: Approx. 26.0 megapixels max. FOCUS POINT: Still images: Max. 759 points (phase-detection AF). Continuous Drive Speed (approx. max.): Hi+: 11 fps. Battery Life (Still Images): Approx. 610 shots (LCD monitor) (CIPA standard)”
Spec values are the manufacturers' published figures, compared factually — we don't rank cameras. Fit verdicts are planning estimates from published interior dimensions, not guarantees. See methodology.
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