Canon EOS-1Ds

Canon EOS-1Ds
Overview
Type Single-lens reflex
Lens
Lens Interchangeable (EF)
Sensor/Medium
Sensor 35.8 mm × 23.8 mm CMOS
Maximum resolution 4,064 × 2,704 (11.1 million)
ASA/ISO range 100–1250 in 1/3 stops, plus 50 (L) as option
Storage CompactFlash (Type I or Type II) / max 8 GB
Focusing
Focus modes One-shot, AI Servo, Manual
Focus areas 45 AF points
Exposure/Metering
Exposure metering 21-zone TTL full aperture metering
Metering modes 21 area eval, partial, spot (center, AF point, multi-spot), center-weighted average
Shutter
Shutter Electronically controlled focal-plane
Shutter speed range 1/8000 to 30 sec. (1/3-stop increments), bulb, X-sync at 1/250 sec.
Continuous shooting approx 3 frame/s, 10 shot burst max
Viewfinder
Viewfinder Optical, 100% coverage vertically and horizontally
General
Rear LCD monitor 2.0 inch, 120,000 pixels
Battery NP-E3 1650mAh, 19.8Wh Ni-MH rechargeable battery
Weight 44.6 oz. / 1265g (body only)
Made in Japan
Chronology
Released November 2002[1]
Predecessor Canon EOS-1V, Canon EOS-1D[1]
Successor Canon EOS-1Ds Mark II[2]

The EOS-1Ds is a full-frame 11.1-megapixel digital SLR camera body made by Canon in the 1Ds series, released on 24 September 2002.[3] It was Canon's first full-frame DSLR.[4] Its dimensions are 156 x 157.6 x 79.9 mm (6.1 x 6.2 x 3.1 in.) and mass (without a battery) is 1,265 g.[1]

Functions

Being an autofocus camera, it has two autofocus modes, and an option for manual focusing. Its viewfinder is a glass pentaprism. It also has a two-inch, thin-film transistor, color liquid-crystal monitor with approximately 120,000 pixels.

The camera's image sensor is a CMOS-based integrated circuit with Bayer filters for RGB color detection (Canon calls it single-plate, in contrast with three-CCD sensors). It has approximately 11.4 million effective pixels. A non-removable optical anti-aliasing filter is located in front of the image sensor.

The shutter is an electronically controlled focal-plane shutter. Its maximum speed is 1/8,000 of one second. Soft-touch shutter release occurs via an electromagnetic signal.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 "EOS-1Ds". Canon Camera Museum.
  2. "EOS-1Ds Mark II". Canon Camera Museum.
  3. Canon Introduces the EOS-1Ds: A Digital SLR Camera Featuring an 11.1 Megapixel, Full-Frame CMOS Sensor
  4. Askey, Phil (December 2002). "Canon EOS-1Ds Review". Digital Photography Review. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.