Roberts Raw!

› posts tagged ‘eos’

Canon Hits 50 Million EF Lenses

So, Canon has announced the production of its 50 millionth EF lens. I was surprised at this—Nikon did celebrate 50 million first, despite Canon being a larger company—until I remembered that Nikon was celebrating the F mount, which they’ve never abandoned, but Canon’s only been running on the EOS/EF mount for some 20ish years, having used the wildly different FD mount before. So, congrats, Canon, on this your newest milestone, and hopefully many more to come.

Oh, and that 50 millionth lens? It was one of the new EF 100mm f 2.8L Macro IS USMs. Just for the record.



Canon EOS 1D Mark IV firmware update available

Canon’s firmware update for the

EOS 1D Mark IV is available for download from Canon immediately.

What’s the update do you ask?

This firmware update (Version 1.0.6) incorporates the
following enhancement:
Firmware Version 1.0.6 enhances the AF tracking performance.*
*AF performance has been enhances[sic] for receding subjects and for subjects that are approaching at a low speed.

Right on, Canon.



Forumbusters: Don’t Hate on AF-S

So, if you own both a computer and a camera, there’s a better than average chance you’ve encountered one of the many online gear forums, where people discuss camera equipment. And, while a lot of useful information can be learned from these forums, they also rival the Mos Eisley cantina for biggest dens of inequity going, and I’ve lurked on them long enough to notice there are several popular fallacies that seem to never go out of style, which is sad because they frequently stand in the way of better customer satisfaction.

So, we’re going to start addressing a few of these as a respected dealer of equipment, with all our insider knowledge and decades and decades of experience with camera equipment over the ages.

And first up is AF-S. AF-S is Nikon’s designation for lenses with an integral ultrasonic motor for focusing, introduced in 1996. Now, if you’re new to equipment, you may not know that auto-focus cameras used to use a body-based focus motor and screw drive system. Nikon’s AF-S comes under fire because starting with the D40, they started leaving a body-based motor out of their cameras, forcing users to buy AF-S lenses if they wanted autofocus. This gets decried a lot as a shameless attempt on Nikon’s part to force new lens sales and cut-off the used market. AF-S gets a lot of hate.

Of course, never mind that Canon switched entirely to in-lens focus motors when it created its EOS system and EF mount in 1987, making it’s entire FD line-up completely unusable with new cameras. Or that Olympus and Sony’s DSLR systems also use only in-lens AF systems. Or that in lens AF systems are faster, quieter, and more accurate. Obviously such technological improvements must be bad, right?

Simple answer: if you’re a new DSLR customer and can afford it, go AF-S. Even though the more expensive bodies still support the body-motor, in-lens focus motors have been the future for the past twenty years. They might cost you more than the old used ones, but they’ll continue to work going forward on all Nikon bodies. Plus, don’t forget that focus motors aren’t all that’s improved in the past twenty years: lens coatings, exotic lens elements like aspherical elements, and even basic lens formulas have all continued improving and the newer AF-S lenses will yield more than just a focus motor for your money.



EOS 1D Mark IV tested by Brad Mangin

Anybody who knows me knows that I’m not a professional sports photographer and that putting a 1D Mark IV in my hands would be about as useful as putting me behind the wheel of any car that’s won a NASCAR race in the last decade. Can I figure things on the exposure triangle? Sure. Much past that, things get iffy.

Fortunately, Canon puts samples in the hands of guys like Brad Mangin, who is a professional sports photographer. You can see his first hand use of the EOS 1D Mark IV with the 400 f/2.8 (on and off the 1.4x tele-converter) in the Detroit Lions vs San Francisco 49ers game here, complete with a RAW file downloadable from his server.



Canon EOS 7D Gets Honor of “Last Review of the Decade” at DCResource

7dJeff Keller at DCResource has his hands-on, average-joe review of the newest available Canon body up on his site. For those who’ve forgotten or not encountered it yet, the Canon EOS 7D is a new tier of APS-C sensor (1.6x crop) body from Canon, designed to sit above the 50D and below the 1D series, and sit in parallel to the full-frame EOS 5D series. To that end it has quite a few high-end features, including a robust weather-sealed body, 18 megapixels, an all new AF module, a 100% viewfinder, and 3 raw modes.

Does it live up to its billing? The DCResource article is typically hard statement free, leaving you to call your own judgments, but he has no shortage of good things to say for it at the end of the review…



Canon Rebel XT: Tougher Than Gravity?

© Calin Leucuta

© Calin Leucuta

So, who’s willing to exercise their credulity muscles this morning in favor of a change from the usual? I know I get tired of the usual stream of product recalls, firmware upgrades, and general nay-saying you’ll find about any camera made ever on your average online forum. So, I’m willing to shoot this story the benefit of belief until proven otherwise because I want to.

FM member Calin Leucuta has a story posted about his skydiver friend who’s helmet mounted video camera and Rebel XT came loose during a dive and plummeted to the earthy-face of ol’ Gaia in their own freefall. From approximately 3,000 feet. The video camera is apparently scrap, but reportedly the Canon, banged up and ugly, still, well, works.

Video evidence might be coming. Or this might be a hoax. But right now, let’s just give it the benefit of a doubt and declare that Rebel XT the proven toughest camera in the world.

Via Engadget via Canon Rumors via Fred Miranda.



Patrick Murphy-Racey Shoots SEC Championship Game on Canon EOS 7Ds

Been looking to see some Canon 7D footage shot by a talented, competent working pro before choosing a side in the use of HD video in DSLRs? Yeah, we figured you’d already picked a side too. But, if you haven’t, why not take a look at Mr. Murphy-Racey’s little video here?

All footage shot with Canon 7D camera bodies at 1/125th and 1/160th shutter-speed at 60P (720). I used three lenses: Canon EF400mm f/2.8L IS, EF200mm f/2L IS, EF15mm f/2.8. I also used two Cavision viewfinders to ease focusing on the LCD… Hope you enjoy it as much as I did shooting it!!!! pm-r

SEC Championship Game 12.5.2009, GeorgiaDome from patrick murphy-racey on Vimeo.



Canon Days: S90 Comparisons

[EDITOR'S NOTE: Carel sent us this as a supplement to his last post.]

[UPDATED: Now better laid out for comparisons]

As mentioned in the review, all images were shot without noise reduction or sharpening. For the Canon 350D I only shot 400, 800 and 1600ISO

-Carel Struycken

PowerShot S90 Crops:

ISO 100

ISO 100

ISO 200

ISO 200

ISO 400

ISO 400

ISO 800

ISO 800

ISO 1600

ISO 1600

ISO 3200

ISO 3200

PowerShot G10 Crops:

ISO 100

ISO 100

ISO 200

ISO 200

ISO 400

ISO 400

ISO 800

ISO 800

ISO 1600

ISO 1600

EOS 350D Crops:

ISO 400

ISO 400

ISO 800

ISO 800

ISO 1600

ISO 1600



Canon EOS-1D Mark IV Whitepaper Tells All

eos-1d-mark-IVCanon has released its whitepaper for its new flagship model, the APS-H endowed EOS-1D Mark IV. Full of insanely detailed notes on the new technology inside this beast, and clearly stating where it differs from the last generation, this is a must read for any pro out there seriously interested in what to expect from the new Mark IV.

The whitepaper itself is quite extensive–123 pages, actually– and if you don’t find yourself dreadfully interested in such things as the construction of cross-type sesnors, this is probably not the read for you. Although, at this level, if you’re not concerned with how that technology affects your photography, this might not be the camera for you, either (the stellar EOS 7D might be more your thing).

I’ve made it through bits of it, and here are some highlights:

Highly responsive AF systems offer accurate predictive AF (they focus quickly on subjects in the AF frame), but they have difficulty stabilizing focus if the subject leaves the AF frame during AI Servo AF continuous shooting. The 1D Mark III, highly responsive by design, consequently has a lower probability of accurately focusing on fast-moving subjects that are hard to keep within the AF frame. With the new 1D Mark IV AI Servo II AF algorithm, stability, reliability and AF precision have all been improved without a sacrifice in responsiveness. Predictive AF is more intelligent and avoids over-response, and difficult lighting — both low contrast and very bright conditions — is handled better.

Note that although the maximum aperture of the following lenses or combinations is f/4, cross-type focusing with 39 AF points is now possible with these current lenses:

  • EF 17-40mm f/4L USM
  • EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM
  • EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS USM + Extender EF1.4x II
  • EF 200mm f/2L IS USM + Extender EF2x II
  • EF 300mm f/2.8L IS USM + Extender EF1.4x II
  • EF 400mm f/2.8L IS USM + Extender EF1.4x II

C.Fn III-3: (AI Servo 1st/2nd image priority) has had the optional [3: Release/Tracking priority] setting added. Shutter-release priority (rather than focus priority) is given to the first shot. During continuous shooting (from the second shot onward), stable focus-tracking of the subject is given priority. This new setting, which was the only option for AI Servo AF release/tracking priority with the original EOS-1D, EOS-1D Mark II and EOS-1D Mark II N, was conspicuously absent on the EOS-1D Mark III. Now, EOS-1D Mark IV users will have the best of both worlds together with the new improvements to AF hardware and software.

There you go, straight from big red’s mouth. Canon has obviously done a lot of soul-searching in the making of this camera, and what I’m reading in the whitepaper is very level-headed and solid. This should be quite a camera, if these changes hold true…

Canon’s EOS-1D Mark IV Whitepaper



Canon Days Kicks Off At Roberts

Canon Days has started here at Roberts, and the first specials up on the site are for the Rebel XSi with an 18-55 IS and 55-250mm IS lens, the 7D finds itself shipping with a free Canon 200DG Gadget Bag, PowerShot G10s make a brief reappearance, and the PowerShot A480 is at a very friendly new low price. I think next up we have some more camcorders…

Oh, and tomorrow we’ll have a nice little bonus for Canon week: A hands-on review of the new PowerShot S90 by none other than Carel Struycken. So, keep your eyes tuned here, and to our home page. This’ll be a nice week for stocking up on Canon gear…




Switch To Mobile Site