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 and the predecessor to the EOS 800D. 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.
3.0" vari-angle Clear View II LCD touchscreen with 1,040,000 dots resolution.
3.5 mm microphone jack for external microphones or recorders
Wi-Fi + NFC connectivity
"Anti-flicker" – the camera can be set to automatically delay the moment of exposure to compensate for flickering electric lighting
760D
The 760D was announced together with the EOS 750D. It is very similar to the 750D, but adds the following features:
An LCD information displayon 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 in live view mode, allowing for continuous autofocus during shooting bursts. 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.
Predecessor Comparison
The Canon EOS 750D is the successor to the EOS 700D with the following improvements.
Higher Image Resolution: The T5i has a resolution of 17.9 megapixels, whereas the T6i provides 24 MP.
More AF-Points: 19 vs 9 AF-Points.
Lighter Body: The T6i is slightly lighter than the T5i.
Built-in Wi-Fi: The T5i doesn't have built-in Wi-Fi, whereas the T6i features both Wi-Fi and NFC technology allow the camera to connect to a compatible device to share images or enable remote control of the camera.
Sensor issues
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. The Hybrid CMOS AF III system is also prone to cause 'banding' - seven pairs of horizontal lines across the image which are particularly noticeable when the image is processed aggressively, this is particularly noticeable in astrophotography. Canon stated "Canon is able to reproduce the stripes. The stripes will appear in those areas where the pixels for the AF are located. This is causing a lower density of image pixels in those areas. This not a lack of quality, since the effect will be seen only if heavy post-processing is applied."