| Leaked in some detail over the weekend
we can now bring you full details of the 16.7 megapixel
EOS-1Ds Mark II. Successor to the EOS-1Ds the Mark II maintains
the 36 x 24 mm CMOS sensor (full 35 mm frame size), raises
the pixel count by almost six million pixels, provides ISO
sensitivity through to ISO 3200, faster continuous shooting
(4 fps) with a large and improved buffer (32 JPEG, 11 RAW)
as well as all of the changes we saw between the EOS-1D
to EOS-1D Mark II. Additionally Canon has also announced
the WFT-E1 Wireless Transmitter which supports 802.11b/g
(WiFi) as well as tethered LAN for transmission of images
directly back to a server. It will be priced £5,999
(UK), $7,999 (US) and ˆ8,000 (Europe).
Press Release:
Canon’s 16.7 Megapixel SLR extends studio
photographer’s options
Amstelveen, the Netherlands, 21 September
2004. Canon, a world leader
in photographic and imaging technology, today announces
its new flagship camera: the 35mm full-frame 16.7 Megapixel
EOS-1Ds Mark II Digital SLR. The camera is expected to appeal
to professional studio and commercial photographers.
Featuring a full-frame 36 x 24mm 16.7 Megapixel CMOS sensor,
the EOS-1Ds Mark II produces images with outstanding colour
rendition and dynamic range. It has sufficient resolution
to produce files which convert to 50MB uncompressed TIFF
at 24 bit colour depth, now considered standard acceptable
size by leading international photo agencies and stock libraries.
Replacing the award winning 11.1 Megapixel EOS-1Ds, the
camera is powered by Canon’s second generation DIGIC II
image processor and is capable of firing at 4 fps for bursts
of up to 32 frames in JPEG, or 11 frames in RAW. An optional
wireless adaptor (also released today) delivers high speed
IEEE802.11b/g wireless LAN and 100 Megabit per second wired
LAN support.
Besides the inherent advantages of digital, such as immediate
turn-around and elimination of film costs, it is the flexibility
of the EOS 35mm SLR format which Canon expects to appeal
to many studio photographers. For the first time, medium
format image quality combines with access to the world’s
most extensive range of professional lenses, spanning from
14mm to 1200mm.
“The EOS-1Ds Mark II is a tremendous achievement, it represents
the pinnacle of Canon’s digital camera technology,” said
Mogens Jensen, Head of Canon Consumer Imaging Europe. “With
its resolution, image quality, immediacy of wireless and
the power and flexibility of SLR, the EOS-1Ds Mark II offers
the first real digital alternative to medium format, which
has so far been the choice for mainstream commercial studio
and location work.”
Canon expects the camera to be adopted in areas such as
fashion, car, calendar, advertising and architectural photography.
Key camera specifications include:
- 16.7 MP full frame 36 x 24mm CMOS sensor
- 0.3 second start up and 4fps performance
- ISO 100-1600, expandable to L:50 and H:3200
- Digital Photo Professional v1.5 RAW processing s/ware
with support for sRGB, Adobe RGB and wide gamut RGB colour
spaces plus various European, North American and Japanese
standard CMYK separation simulations
- Hi-Speed FireWire, & Video out i/face for complete
connectivity
- Dual high performance SD and CF/CF-II card slots (supports
cards greater than 2GB)
- Complete compatibility to all EF lenses & EX-series
Speedlites
- 2.0” LCD screen with 230,000 pixels, 1.5-10x playback
zoom
- Simultaneous RAW & JPEG shooting
- Battery life – approximately 1200 shots @ 20C, 800 at
0C – in accordance with CIPA testing standards
Unsurpassed image quality
The full frame 16.7 Megapixel resolution sensor has a built
in low-pass filter to reduce false colour and moiré
effects, which can appear when shooting subjects with fine
regular detail, such as textiles. The second generation
DIGIC II processor delivers 0.3 sec start up time, fast
continuous shooting and simultaneous RAW and JPEG recording.
It also features advances in the image processing algorithms
to improve white balance, auto exposure and overall image
quality. Photographers can choose between four resolutions
and 10 quality levels for JPEG images. Within the camera,
the EOS-1Ds Mark II supports sRGB and Adobe RGB colour spaces
with user settable colour saturation and tone levels, and
provides five preset and two user-definable colour matrices.
When using the Digital Photo Professional software and RAW
image files, Wide Gamut RGB is also available. White Balance
(WB) bias is correctable by +/- 9 levels for both blue/amber
and magenta/green bias and the camera supports WB bracketing
up to +/- 3 levels.
Flexibility of SLR in the studio
Photographers switching to Canon’s EOS system open up access
to over 60 EF lenses, including tilt-shift, macro, super
telephoto and Image Stabilizer lenses. The EOS-1Ds Mark
II is compatible with the entire range of EX-Series Speedlite
flash units, including two macro set ups and a range of
wireless master/slave flash solutions. For photographers
comfortable with the vertical orientation viewfinders of
some medium format cameras, the camera accepts an optional
Angle finder C right-angle viewfinder.
The immediacy of wireless image
transfer
With the optional Wireless LAN adapter plugged into the
camera’s IEEE1394/Firewire connection, photographers can
work untethered as huge full-frame RAW files transfer automatically
to the studio LAN in seconds . “A London publisher can now
lay out a production-ready front cover of a magazine with
a photograph taken literally seconds beforehand in a Milan
studio,” observes Jensen. “Once this level of immediacy
becomes commonplace, it is hard to imagine anyone accepting
the risks and costs associated with the delays of film developing.”
The Wireless LAN adapter supports both IEEE802.11b, IEEE802.11g
wireless network standards and also includes a 100 Megabit
wired ethernet connector for automatic and immediate transfer
to any wide or local area network. The system supports a
comprehensive range of major wireless network encryption
and security features.
The CMOS advantage
The EOS-1Ds Mark II’s CMOS sensor offers lower noise levels
and a superior dynamic range (capacity to capture subtle
tonal gradations in shadow, midtone and highlight areas)
to that of sensors found in other digital cameras and camera
backs. Canon is the only camera manufacturer with a history
of significant research and development investment into
image sensors. The resulting CMOS sensor technology found
in its digital SLR range is key to the company’s competitive
advantage. CMOS sensors have formed the basis of a long
line of award winning cameras including the EOS-1Ds, EOS-1D
and EOS 10D. Such is the strength of Canon’s sensor development
that this is the third new CMOS sensor Canon has commercialised
this year. Canon’s first commercialised sensor technology
formed the basis of the 1987 EOS auto focus system, with
CMOS technology first appearing as an image sensor in the
2000
EOS D30.
RAW processing
Digital Photo Professional v.1.5 image processing software
is provided for high-speed processing of lossless RAW files.
Processing with Digital Photo Professional is approx. 6
times faster than the File Viewer Utility supplied with
the EOS-1Ds. It allows real-time display and immediate application
of adjustments to images and includes a wide array of RAW,
TIFF or JPEG image editing functions, which give control
over variables such as white balance, dynamic range, exposure
compensation and colour tone. sRGB, Adobe RGB and Wide Gamut
RGB colour spaces are supported, and an ICC (International
Colour Consortium) profile is automatically attached to
RAW images that have been converted to TIFF of JPEG formats.
This allows images to be displayed in their faithful colours
in software applications that support ICC profiles, such
as Adobe Photoshop. Image processing of various parameter
changes can now be batched rather than carried out sequentially,
vastly increasing the efficiency of applying a number of
changes to the same images. The new version of Digital Photo
Professional adds the ability to simulate the CMYK separation
of images based on regular Japanese, European and USA printing
industry practices.
Review
Canon EOS-1Ds Mark II
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