Canon EOS-1D Mark II explained

Model:
Sensor:CMOS
Res:3,504 × 2,336 (8 million)
Lens:Interchangeable (EF)
Viewfinder:Optical
Storage:CompactFlash (Type I or Type II) or Secure Digital / max CF:8GB SD:2GB (This can be fixed with Firmware Version 1.2.6.)
Madein:Japan
Date:April 2004
Replaced:Canon EOS-1D[1]
Successor:Canon EOS-1D Mark III[2]

The EOS 1D Mark II is a professional 8.2 megapixel digital single lens reflex camera (DSLR) camera body produced by Canon. The EOS 1D Mark II was the successor of the EOS 1D and was itself replaced by the Canon EOS-1D Mark III in 2007. It was Canon's first dual-card slot EOS camera with one CF slot and one SD slot[3] that was meant easily to use two dominant card types and have a assurance that once a small sized primary and faster CF slot is full, camera can be used to take photographs when recording was continued on secondary and slower card in critical moment. It also now had wireless capabilities. When paired with the new Canon WFT-E1, you could transfer images to a PC using an FTP server.

Features

The EOS 1D Mark II features:

The camera's image sensor is a CMOS-based integrated circuit. It has approximately 8.5 million total pixel sensors in a Bayer filter pattern. A non-removable anti-aliasing filter (optical low-pass filter) is located in front of the image sensor.

The shutter is an electronically controlled focal-plane shutter. Its maximum speed is 1/8000 second. Soft-touch shutter release occurs via an electromagnetic signal.

EOS-1D Mark II N

On August 22, 2005, Canon announced the successor to the EOS 1D Mark II. The new Canon EOS-1D Mark II N features the same 8.2 megapixel CMOS sensor, DIGIC II image processor and 8.5 frame per second shooting speed of its predecessor. The primary changes are a new 2.5" wide viewing angle LCD monitor, Evaluative Metering, an improved buffer, and new 'Picture Style' image parameters.

Users

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: EOS-1D Mark II . Canon Camera Museum.
  2. Web site: EOS-1D Mark III . Canon Camera Museum.
  3. Web site: Dual card slots in Canon EOS cameras. www.eos-magazine.com.
  4. Web site: 'Bride' Stripped Bare. www.stopmotionworks.com.