10/07/2550

Canon EOS 30D Digital SLR

By : Ben Long


The 8.2-megapixel sibling of the popular EOS 30D has a large LCD and a pleasing interface.
It might be logical to assume that Canon's new EOS 30D digital SLR camera, successor to the company's popular EOS 20D, would pack a higher-resolution sensor. But such is not the case. The EOS 30D ($1499 as of March 21, 2006) provides the same imaging circuitry as its predecessor, but it also includes some much-needed new features for only $100 more than the 20D.



In many respects, the 30D looks exactly like the 20D. The camera has the same control layout as the 20D, but its 2.5-inch LCD screen is a marked improvement over the 20D's 1.8-inch screen.

The 30D's interface is a model of elegant simplicity: Almost all of the controls that you'd use in everyday shooting are accessible via a button. Yet because Canon doubles up the functions of the camera's buttons, the unit is not overladen with buttons and knobs. As a result, finding the control you're looking for is uncomplicated, and making adjustments with one hand is easy. Still, I wish that there were an external bracketing control, so I wouldn't have to navigate a menu, and that the power switch weren't inconveniently located at the bottom of the back panel.

Canon's menu system is simple and intuitive; you can navigate quickly using the control wheel on the back of the camera. With the larger LCD, menu items are bigger and easier to read. Overall, Canon's interface is the best in the industry.

The most important change to the 30D is the addition of a spot meter. Previous models offered a partial metering mode that read the middle 9 percent of the viewfinder, but the spot meter capably reads the middle 3.5 percent. The evaluative and center-weight averaging metering modes remain available as well.

The picture styles feature, which originally appeared on Canon's EOS 5D model, is another enhancement. It allows JPEG shooters to save up to nine sets of image-processing parameters, each set containing custom sharpness, contrast, saturation, and color tone settings. Though not significantly different from the 20D's parameters feature, the 30D's picture styles feature gives you more sets to customize. JPEG shooters will also welcome the new ability to completely deactivate in-camera sharpening. (For RAW shooters, these additions are irrelevant, since the camera doesn't apply any processing to RAW files.)

Other important new additions include the ability to adjust ISO in increments of one-third stop; an ISO readout in the viewfinder, so you don't have to consult the LCD to change the ISO; an optional slower burst speed, which permits more shots in a single burst; and a more durable shutter. Still missing: the ability to auto-bracket more than three shots (and as few as two), and an easier-to-access mirror lockup feature.


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