Canon 40D - EOS 40D DSLR Manual de usuario Pagina 8

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If you are shooting in portrait orientation, especially if you are shooting in this orientation for
a long period of time, an accessory portrait/vertical grip is a great asset. It gives you a much
more comfortable and stable "grip" on the camera body. There are several grips available
for the Canon EOS 40D (they attach to the bottom of the camera as shown above). The first
is the battery grip made for the 20D/30D - the
Canon BG-E2 (now discontinued). The second is
the new at this time
Canon BG-E2N. This grip surprisingly does not include the "AF-ON" button,
but does add some weather sealing.
T
he third option is the new Wireless Transmitter WF
T
-E3A. The WFT-E3A "Permits wireless
transfer and back-up, as well as wireless remote control of the camera in Live View mode. It
can also be connected to various GPS receivers or Hi-Speed USB 2.0 external storage devices
such as convenient flash drives or high-capacity hard drives with much larger storage capacity
than the memory cards in the camera for instant back-up as images are captured." It also
provides an "AF-ON" button and has some weather sealing.
T
he Canon EOS 40D continues to use same battery as its predecessors - the Canon BP-511A
Battery
. I like these batteries - they are relatively small (it's easy to carry a spare or two) and
they deliver a very sufficiently large number of shots. The compact size of the BP-511A's
charger is especially convenient when traveling. I usually keep careful track of my battery use
when I get a new camera. Unfortunately, I lost my 40D shot count due to sharing flash cards
in multiple cameras (this can change the camera's image number). I estimate the first battery
to have delivered well over 1,000 shots. Canon rates the battery life at 1,100 shots without
flash (800 with 50% flash use). Sounds right to me.
Still included on the 40D is the print button. This is no big news to many of us, but what
caught my attention is the ability to rotate the image +/- 10 degrees within the in-camera
trim function. This is a feature not even present in DPP (Digital Photo Pro), the full-function
processing software included with all of Canon's EOS Digital cameras.
T
he Canon EOS 40D's feature and spec list goes on and on - it has most or all of what most
people need. There is a link to Canon's 40D White Paper in the "Other Information" section
below. It, along with the owner's manual, is worth reading if the 40D sounds like the camera
for you.
While there are an infinite number of camera comparison tests that can be performed, there
are only a finite number of camera models available. You need to select the one(s) that is
(are) right for you. And if you are like many of us, your budget is one of your primary
considerations. The Digital Rebel/xxxD Series, currently lead by the XTi/400D, represents
Canon's entry level
Digital SLRs. These models offer great image quality and are packed with
features and sold for a low price. Aside from lower cost, the advantage maintained by the
Digital Rebels/xxxDs is the smaller size/weight. You saw the top-view comparison between
the XTi/400D and the 40D earlier in this review. Below is the back-view comparison ...
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