DJI Ronin 4D Ronin 4D
Integrated 4-axis gimbal stabilization with the 44.7MP full-frame sensor captures 8K60 ProRes RAW and 4K120 slow-motion. The modular, 1450g body bundles a LiDAR range finder and a 1000 cd/m² articulating touchscreen for streamlined solo focus and monitoring. It suits cinematographers and VFX crews needing a ready-to-shoot stabilized 8K camera on controlled sets, not fast action work.
Про цей Camera
The Ronin 4D 4-Axis Cinema Camera 8K Combo Kit with DL PZ 17-28mm T3.0 ASPH Lens from DJI combines imaging, stabilization, and focusing in a lightweight, uniquely flexible gimbal/camera rig. This 4D X9-8K version pairs the Ronin 4D gimbal with the Zenmuse X9-8K camera, a DJI DL 17-28mm T3.0 lens, a LiDAR range finder, a low-pass filter, and a RAW license that requires activation via DJI; wireless video transmission is available separately. With support for up to 8K60 17:9 video in Apple ProRes RAW, and 8K30 17:9 and 8K75 2.39:1 in ProRes 422 HQ, the X9-8K offers the higher imaging standards required for visual effects, cine-style capture, and broadcasting while reducing your setup time with its all-in-one combination design.
- Highly Integrated Modular Design
- Zenmuse X9-8K Gimbal Camera
- DJI DL PZ 17-28mm T3.0 Lens Included
- 4D RAW License Requires DJI Activation
The 30-Second Version
With video quality in the 91st percentile and a built-in 4-axis gimbal, the Ronin 4D 8K delivers jaw-dropping footage. But the lowest user sentiment we've ever recorded (9th percentile) stems from a fatal flaw: focus assist and reliable autofocus vanish above 60fps. If you shoot at 120fps, you'll be manually focusing blind.
Overview
The DJI Ronin 4D 8K Combo Kit lands in the 91st percentile for video quality, putting it among the absolute best cinema cameras we've tested. It shoots 8K60 ProRes RAW, 4K120, and comes with a bright 5.5" touchscreen and a shockingly effective built-in 4-axis gimbal. But here's the catch: user sentiment sits at a brutal 9th percentile—one of the lowest we've ever seen—thanks to serious focusing headaches that undercut the otherwise incredible image.
Performance
This thing is a video beast. The 44.7MP full-frame sensor and ProRes RAW support let you capture 8K75 in 2.39:1 or 8K30 in 17:9 with ProRes 422 HQ, and 4K120 in 10-bit Log. In practice, that means you're getting cinema-grade detail and dynamic range in a highly integrated package. The 5.5" display is sharp and bright at 1000 nits, ranking well above average, and the modular design with LiDAR and remote control adds real on-set flexibility. The 4-axis gimbal stabilization is what sets this camera apart. While our stabilization metric only places it at the 32nd percentile (due to the unique nature of compared systems), the gimbal delivers shots so smooth you'd think you had a separate Ronin rig. The weak link is autofocus: it's below average at 34th percentile, and the real killer is that all focus assist tools vanish above 60fps. Manual focusing at 120fps becomes a guessing game, which is a huge letdown for a $10K cinema tool.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Incredible 8K ProRes RAW video quality (91st percentile) 91th
- Built-in 4-axis gimbal delivers rock-steady handheld footage 85th
- Comprehensive modular design with LiDAR, remote control, and hard case included 84th
- Bright 5.5" 1000-nit touchscreen ranks in the top 16% 79th
- Includes a sharp DL PZ 17-28mm T3.0 lens right out of the box
Cons
- No focus assist above 60fps makes high-speed manual focus a nightmare 9th
- Autofocus lags behind (34th percentile) and struggles at 4K120 22th
- User sentiment in the bottom 9% of all cameras we've measured 29th
- Hefty 1450g body and no weather sealing limit run-and-gun shoots 32th
- Not Netflix approved, which may rule out some production workflows
The Word on the Street
Specifications
Full Specifications
Sensor
| Type | CMOS |
| Size | full-frame |
| Megapixels | 44.7 |
| ISO Range | 200 |
Shooting
| Max Shutter | 1/8000 |
| Electronic Shutter | Yes |
Video
| Max Resolution | 8K |
| 4K FPS | 120 |
| 10-bit | Yes |
| Log Profile | Yes |
| RAW Video | Yes |
| Codec | H.264, ProRes 422 HQ, ProRes RAW |
Display & EVF
| Touchscreen | Yes |
| Articulating | Yes |
Build
| Weight | 1.4 kg / 3.2 lbs |
Connectivity
| Wi-Fi | Yes |
| Bluetooth | No |
| USB | USB-C 3.2 / 3.1 Gen 1 |
| HDMI | HDMI Output |
| Hot Shoe | No |
Value & Pricing
Prices for this kit vary wildly across vendors, from $9,999 to $13,583—a $3,584 spread. If you're set on buying, shop around to land that low end. For around ten grand, you're getting a camera that would cost far more to replicate with a separate cine body, gimbal, wireless follow focus, and monitor. But that value proposition only holds if you can live with the focusing limitations. Against a well-rigged Sony a1 II or Nikon Z9 with an external gimbal, the Ronin 4D is a pricier but far more streamlined solution.
vs Competition
Stack it up against the Sony Alpha a1 II or Nikon Z9, and the Ronin 4D is in a different conversation. Both those mirrorless flagships shoot 8K internally but need a gimbal and external recorder to match the DJI's ProRes RAW muscle—and still won't touch the integrated 4-axis stabilization. The Panasonic S5IIX offers stellar IBIS and 6K for a fraction of the price, but lacks internal RAW and the gimbal-grade smoothness. Where the Ronin 4D stumbles is autofocus: the Sony and Nikon, especially, run circles around its 34th percentile AF. If you need to pull focus reliably at high frame rates, those hybrids are far more forgiving.
| Spec | DJI Ronin 4D Ronin 4D | Canon EOS R EOS R6 Mark III | Sony a7 a7 V | Nikon Z9 Z9 | Panasonic LUMIX GH7 GH7 | Fujifilm X-E5 X-E5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type | cinema | mirrorless | mirrorless | mirrorless | mirrorless | mirrorless |
| Sensor | 44.7MP full-frame | 32.5MP full-frame | 33MP full-frame | 45.7MP full-frame | 25.2MP micro-four-thirds | 40.2MP aps-c |
| AF Points | - | 1053 | 759 | 1053 | 315 | 425 |
| Burst FPS | - | 40 | 30 | 30 | 75 | 13 |
| Video | 8K @120fps | 6K @120fps | 4K @120fps | 8K @120fps | 5K @120fps | 6K @60fps |
| IBIS | false | true | true | true | true | true |
| Weather Sealed | false | true | true | true | true | true |
| Weight (g) | 1450 | 609 | 610 | 1160 | 721 | 445 |
| Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare |
| Product | Af | Evf | Build | Burst | Video | Sensor | Battery | Display | User Sentiment | Connectivity | Social Proof | Stabilization |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DJI Ronin 4D Ronin 4D | 33.7 | 36.1 | 84.6 | 29.1 | 90.8 | 63.5 | 44.9 | 84.3 | 8.8 | 79.2 | 22.1 | 32.4 |
| Canon EOS R EOS R6 Mark III Compare | 98.4 | 88 | 94.9 | 93.1 | 89.6 | 58.8 | 96.6 | 99.2 | 92.9 | 93.3 | 94.6 | 99.5 |
| Sony a7 a7 V Compare | 95.7 | 88.7 | 95 | 91 | 89.6 | 60.1 | 96.6 | 99.6 | 92.9 | 93.3 | 94.6 | 96.1 |
| Nikon Z9 Z9 Compare | 98.4 | 89.5 | 99.4 | 96.1 | 97.9 | 65 | 97.3 | 84.3 | 97.2 | 93.3 | 84.9 | 84.7 |
| Panasonic LUMIX GH7 GH7 Compare | 84.7 | 88 | 97.4 | 95.2 | 97.5 | 56.1 | 89.2 | 84.3 | 92.9 | 93.3 | 94.6 | 96.1 |
| Fujifilm X-E5 X-E5 Compare | 88.1 | 74.9 | 88 | 76.9 | 84.1 | 97.1 | 89.2 | 84.3 | 83.3 | 93.3 | 87.9 | 93.5 |
Common Questions
Q: Does the combo kit include a lens?
Yes. The Ronin 4D 8K Combo Kit ships with the DJI DL PZ 17-28mm T3.0 lens, so you're ready to shoot right out of the box. You can swap the DL mount for Sony E or Leica M if you need other glass.
Q: Can the Zenmuse X9 camera be mounted on an Inspire 2 drone?
No, it's not compatible. The X9 is purpose-built for the Ronin 4D system and communicates through a dedicated interface that the Inspire 2 lacks.
Q: Is there an adapter for Canon EF lenses?
Not officially. DJI provides interchangeable mounts for Sony E and Leica M, but no Canon EF option exists yet. Some users have reported success with third-party smart adapters, but autofocus and electronic control may be unreliable.
Who Should Skip This
If you rely on fast, dependable autofocus for event work or often shoot above 60fps, the Ronin 4D will frustrate you. The absence of focus assist at high frame rates and its 34th percentile AF performance mean you'll miss critical shots in dynamic environments. Also, if Netflix approval is a hard requirement for your deliverables or you need a lightweight handheld rig for all-day shooting, look at a fully rigged mirrorless instead—the 1450g body plus gimbal weight adds up fast.
Verdict
The Ronin 4D 8K is a filmmaker's dream on paper, and when everything clicks, the footage is stunning. The integrated gimbal is a genuine innovation that makes it a one-of-a-kind cinema rig. But the missing focus assist above 60fps and rock-bottom user sentiment can't be ignored. This camera demands a crew that's ready to work around its quirks—pulling focus manually without peaking, and staying under 60fps when they need autofocus aids. If you can handle that, you'll love the image. If not, the frustration will outweigh the brilliance.