Canon EOS 400D Review
Product overview
- Launch price:
- £450
- Launch date:
- 1st January 2007
- Manufacturer link:
- http://www.canon.co.uk/
- - 10 megapixel APS-C sensor
- - 250 shots per battery charge
- - Wide-area ninepoint AF system
- - Great for low light situations
Technical Specification
Additional Information: Super HAD CCDAuto Shut-off: Yes
Battery Type: Rechargeable Li-ion
Camera Type: Digital SLR
Case Included: Yes
Colour: Black
Connectivity: USB 2.0;Video Input
Continuous Shooting Speed: 3
Dimensions: 126.5 x 94.2 x 65
Display Size: 2.5
Display Technology: LCD
Drive Modes: Continuous;Self-Timer;Single
Exposure Modes: Aperture-priority;Automatic;Close-Up;Landscape;Manual;Night Portrait;Portrait;Shutter-priority;Sport
Flash: Yes
Flash Modes: Auto;Manual;Off;On;Red-Eye Reduction
Flash Sync: 1/200
Focusing Modes: Manual
Image Formats: JPEG;RAW
Image Sensor Resolution: 10.5
ISO Settings: 100;1600;200;400;600;800
LCD Display: Yes
Lens: TTL-CT-SIR with a CMOS sensor
Longest Shutter Speed: 30
Max. Captured Image Resolution: 3872 x 2592
Memory Card Included: Yes
Memory Types: Compact Flash I;Compact Flash II
Metering Modes: Centre weighted;Evaluative;Partial
Min Shutter Speed: 4000
Movie Mode: Yes
Optical viewfinder: Yes
PictBridge: Yes
Shooting Modes: Auto;Landscape;Night ;Portrait;Sports
Waterproof: Yes
Weight (g): 510
White Balance: Auto;Cloudy;Daylight;Shade;Tungsten;White Fluorescent Light
MPN: 1237B009AA
Price (GBP): 450
PhotoRadar review
Clever anti-dust features and superb picture quality
The 400D, according to all the hype, is set to become the world's most popular digital SLR. In terms of looks, build and sheer usability, this tiny powerhouse of a camera borrows heavily from its acclaimed forerunner, the hugely successful and very likeable eightmegapixel 350D.
To bring it into line with some of the competition, it adds another two million pixels to the APS-C size sensor and gains a much larger TFT, which is a lot easier to see at a glance or even in bright sunlight. Maybe it's just as well, because the same screen is used to display the camera's settings all the time now and it's a big improvement over the squat data panel on the back of the old model.
Battery life is lessened to a degree, but you'll still see 250 or more shots per charge. Also new is the wide-area ninepoint AF system from the semi-pro 30D, and it's super-fast and accurate even when the light begins to drop - at dusk, for example, or inside under tungsten lighting.
Best of all, though, is the addition of new dust-busting features. Even if you don't plan to use anything other than the 18-55mm (28-90mm equivalent) kit lens, dust will eventually find its way on to the sensor. Anyone who has used a digital SLR will know just how desperate they felt when they first saw the annoying black specks on their snaps.
Like some rivals, the 400D uses clever technology to shake those tiny particles from the filter's surface. Although very effective by itself, provided you've taken a snap of a clean, white surface to map the location of the dust beforehand, any persistent dust particles can be removed automatically in the bundled RAW conversion software.
Manual controls are there if you need them, but you know from the instant you pick it up the 400D will be fun to use. Picture quality is simply superb. Outdoors, images show fine gradation and precise colour from any of the shooting modes. And, due to the physically larger sensor than those used in digital compacts, noise isn't as much of an issue, even at the maximum setting of ISO1600.
If we've any grumbles, it's the smallish viewfinder and the white balance errors with indoor lighting. Other than that, you can believe the hype - the EOS 400D is everything that's been said, and more.
Posted by PhotoRadar on Wednesday, 15th July 2009 at 02:58pm GMT.
I have owned the 400D since it came out and have taken 6,000 pics with it so far. It is a superb camera and gives very good image quality. I now use a 24-105mm f4L lens with it which gives me the best pictures ever.
The one niggle I have is with the AI Servo focus. It seems unable to keep focus between shots in continous shooting mode when tracking fast moving vehicles with only about two out of five being in focus. Apart from that it is a great camera for the money.
#1. Posted on Tuesday, 08 Sep 2009 at 02:13pm GMT. Report this


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