Canon

Canon 9128B135 EOS 7D Mark II DSLR 18-135mm Lens Bundle

4.0 (1 reviews)
1080p2MPf/3.5

Dual DIGIC 6 processors and a 65-point all-cross-type AF system let you lock onto fast-moving subjects at 10 fps and not miss the shot.

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*Price sourced from Amazon.com. Last updated:Jun 04, 2026.Price and availability are subject to change.

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Overview

The Canon EOS 7D Mark II is Canon's flagship APS-C DSLR, built around a 20.2MP CMOS sensor, dual DIGIC 6 image processors, and a 65-point all-cross-type phase-detection AF system. Those three specifications together define the camera's purpose: extract maximum performance from an APS-C sensor for high-speed, subject-tracking photography. The 1.6x crop factor that APS-C imposes relative to full-frame is actually an advantage for wildlife and sports work — a 400mm lens becomes a 640mm equivalent, compressing the distance to subjects without the weight and cost of longer telephoto optics. The dual DIGIC 6 processors sustain 10 fps continuous shooting at full resolution with a buffer deep enough to hold a sequence through a critical action moment, and the AF system can track across the frame in both axes simultaneously thanks to the all-cross-type sensor design.

This bundle pairs the camera body and W-E1 Wi-Fi adapter with the EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM lens — a focal length range that covers the majority of shooting situations from environmental wide shots to compressed portrait and wildlife frames. The included accessories (64GB memory card, extra LP-E6 battery, rapid charger, filter kits, and software) meaningfully reduce the immediate additional cost of getting a functional kit into the field. The camera is built for sports, wildlife, and documentary photographers who need the reliability and speed of a phase-detect viewfinder AF system in a body that can withstand demanding field conditions — the weather-sealed magnesium alloy construction and dual card slots (CF + SD) speak directly to professional workflow requirements. Multimedia image-makers will find the full HD 1080p/60fps video and Dual Pixel AF a capable complement to the stills capabilities, though dedicated video shooters will quickly want more manual control than the 7D Mark II provides natively.

Key Features

Bundle Includes: 1 x Canon EOS 7D Mark II DSLR Camera with 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM Lens & W-E1 Wi-Fi Adapter, 1 x SanDisk SecureDigital 64GB Extreme PRO Cmemory Card, 1 x 67mm Graduated Color Filter Kit, 1 x Camera Bag, 1 x 67mm 3 Piece Filter Kit, 1 x Corel Photo Software With PhotoMirage, AfterShot, Painter Essentials, PaintShop Pro, and Video Studio, 1 x LPE6 Battery, 1 x Rapid Charger For LPE6, 1 x Memory Card Reader, 1 x 67mm Wide Angle Lens, 1 x 67mm Telephoto Lens and more...

An already very capable imaging machine, the EOS 7D Mark II DSLR Camera with 18-135mm Lens and W-E1 Wi-Fi Adapter from Canon takes the camera's capabilities up a notch with the inclusion of an SD-card-sized item that adds Wi-Fi connectivity to the camera. Designed with a penchant for speed, the 7D Mark II is characterized by its APS-C-sized 20.2MP CMOS sensor, dual DIGIC 6 image processors, and a top continuous shooting rate of 10 fps.

Both a 65-point all cross-type phase-detection AF system and Dual Pixel CMOS AF technology benefit fast, accurate focusing performance for both optical viewfinder and live view shooting. Additionally, the combination of the dual image processors along with the CMOS sensor also contribute to enhanced low-light sensitivity to a native ISO 16000.

The 7D Mark II comfortably performs in a range of challenging situations, and while ideally situated as a tool for sports and wildlife photographers, it resides equally as well in the hands of contemporary multimedia image-makers.Complementing the 7D Mark II's still imaging assets, support for recording full HD 1080p video is available, in multiple frame rates up to 60 fps.

20.2MP APS-C CMOS Sensor - Dual DIGIC 6 Image Processors - 3.0" 1.04m-Dot ClearView II LCD Monitor - Full HD 1080p/60 Video & Movie Servo AF - Dual Pixel CMOS AF with Live View - 65-Point All Cross-Type Phase-Detect AF - Native ISO 16000, Extended to ISO 51200 - 10 fps Shooting at Full Resolution - Wi-Fi via W-E1 Adapter; Built-In GPS - EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM Lens

Specifications

Sensor
20.2MP APS-C CMOS
Image Processors
Dual DIGIC 6
AF System
65-Point All Cross-Type Phase-Detect
Continuous Shooting
10 fps at full resolution
ISO Range
Native ISO 100–16000, Extended to ISO 51200
Video
Full HD 1080p up to 60fps
Live View AF
Dual Pixel CMOS AF
Display
3.0" 1.04M-dot ClearView II LCD
Connectivity
Wi-Fi via W-E1 Adapter, Built-in GPS
Included Lens
EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM
Memory Card Slots
CF + SD

Pros & Cons

👍 Pros

  • 65-point all-cross-type phase-detect AF system covers a wide area of the APS-C frame, enabling reliable subject tracking across erratic movement paths at 10 fps
  • Dual DIGIC 6 processors sustain 10 fps burst shooting at full 20.2MP resolution without significant buffer slowdown on a fast memory card
  • Dual Pixel CMOS AF provides smooth continuous focus during live view and video recording, adding a practical second AF mode for versatile shooting workflows
  • Built-in GPS enables geolocation tagging of every frame without an external receiver, which is directly useful for wildlife, travel, and documentary work
  • Full HD 1080p/60fps video recording captures slow-motion-capable footage and delivers adequate quality for editorial video alongside stills work

👎 Cons

  • APS-C sensor introduces a 1.6x crop factor, meaning wide-angle coverage requires lenses with short actual focal lengths — the 18-135mm's 18mm end becomes 28.8mm equivalent, limiting truly wide environmental shots
  • The f/3.5-5.6 kit lens aperture range means maximum available light at 135mm is f/5.6, requiring ISO 3200+ in dim indoor arenas to maintain 1/500s shutter speeds for action freezing
  • The W-E1 Wi-Fi adapter occupies the SD card slot — you cannot simultaneously use the adapter and an SD card in that slot, forcing a workflow choice between wireless transfer and local storage
  • At 910g with the 18-135mm lens attached, the 7D Mark II is a substantial shoulder and wrist load during a full day of event or wildlife shooting
  • No in-body image stabilization (IBIS) means stabilization depends entirely on the lens — switching to unstabilized primes eliminates all stabilization for video and slow shutter handheld work

Frequently Asked Questions

The 65 all-cross-type phase-detect points represent a step change over the original 7D's 19-point system. Cross-type sensors detect contrast in both horizontal and vertical directions simultaneously, which means the camera can maintain lock on subjects moving in any direction — not just subjects moving perpendicular to a single axis. Combined with 10 fps and Dual DIGIC 6 processing, the 7D Mark II is one of the most capable APS-C sport cameras Canon has produced.
Dual Pixel CMOS AF provides smooth, fast, continuous contrast-detect AF during live view and video — it's genuinely useful for run-and-gun video work or live view studio shooting. For optical viewfinder shooting, the 65-point phase-detect system takes over and outperforms DPAF in speed and tracking reliability for sports-pace subjects.
The W-E1 is an SD-card-sized adapter that enables Wi-Fi connectivity for the 7D Mark II. It supports image transfer to a smartphone via Canon's Camera Connect app and remote live view control, but it is not a full tethering solution in the sense that professional studio tools like Capture One or Lightroom tethering provide. For professional wireless tethering, third-party solutions or the wired USB connection are more reliable.
Native ISO 16000 is the highest gain setting that Canon specifies as meeting its image quality standards — images at ISO 16000 are noisy but retain detail and color fidelity acceptable for editorial use. The extended ISO 51200 is a software push beyond the native range; images at that setting show significant noise and reduced dynamic range and are primarily useful as a last resort when any exposed frame is preferable to a black one.
For most working situations yes — the 18-135mm covers wide-angle group shots (28mm equivalent at 18mm on APS-C) through moderate telephoto (216mm equivalent at 135mm). The f/3.5-5.6 aperture range means indoor and low-light work at the long end will push ISO higher than a faster prime would. The IS USM system provides image stabilization and a fast, quiet autofocus motor that handles the 7D Mark II's AF system well.