Model: | Canon EOS-1D Mark III |
Sensor: | 28.1mm × 18.7mm (1.3x conversion factor) CMOS, APS-H Format (10.1 effective megapixels) |
Res: | 3,888 × 2,592 (10 million) |
Lens: | Interchangeable (EF) |
Shutter: | Vertical-travel, mechanical, focal-plane shutter with all speeds electronically controlled |
Shutterrange: | 1/8000 to 30 sec. (1/3-stop increments) |
Metering: | 63-zone TTL full aperture metering |
Mmode: | Evaluative metering (linked to all AF points), Partial metering (approx. 13.5% of screen, at center), Spot metering (approx. 3.8% of screen), Centerweighted average metering |
Farea: | 45 AF points (19 cross-type and 26 Assist AF points) |
Fmode: | Autofocus (One-Shot AF, Predictive AI Servo AF), Manual Focus (MF) |
Cont: | 10frame/s up to 22/30/110 frames (raw+JPEG Large Fine/raw/JPEG Large Fine) |
Viewfinder: | Optical |
Rearlcd: | 3.0 in, 230,000 pixels (690,000 dots) TFT color, liquid-crystal monitor |
Storage: | CompactFlash (Type I or Type II), Secure Digital, External Hard Drive or other USB Storage Devices. |
Madein: | Japan |
Date: | May 2007 |
Replaced: | Canon EOS-1D Mark II N[1] |
Successor: | Canon EOS-1D Mark IV[2] |
The EOS 1D Mark III is a professional 10.1 megapixel digital single lens reflex camera (DSLR) camera body produced by Canon. The EOS 1D Mark III was announced on February 21, 2007[3] and is the successor of the Canon EOS-1D Mark II N and was first released in May 2007. In late 2009, the camera was succeeded by the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV. One of the main benefits of the new Mark III, over the previous models, was the added functionality of Live view, allowing users to take pictures while looking at an LCD screen. While it had the same outdated software as the older 1D series cameras, it had a much improved button layout, which is still used today. It also had improved wireless capabilities (with the optional WFT-E2 wireless adapter) over the Mark II. The new WFT-E2 was much smaller than the previous WFT-E1 for the Mark II. The new transmitter could now also connect via a USB port. This allowed the optional addition of a GPS unit and wired PC connectivity.
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 10.1 million effective pixels. A non-removable optical anti-aliasing filter is located in front of the image sensor, which also vibrates as part of an anti-dust mechanism (similar to the one used in the entry-level Canon EOS 400D).
The shutter is an electronically controlled focal-plane shutter. Its maximum speed is 1/8,000 of one second. The shutter is operated by an electromagnet.
The Mark III is Canon's first professional Digital SLR to include a Live View feature, usually reserved for point-and-shoot cameras. The image is displayed on an electronic screen instead of in the viewfinder alone.
The European Imaging and Sound Association (EISA) named the Canon EOS 1D Mark III the "European Professional Camera of the Year 2007-2008".[5]
Issues about Mark III cameras were reported throughout the online photographer communities after the camera's retail launch. These relate to SERVO AF mode, to stripes within the picture, cursor navigation failure, Err 99 messages and sub par low light focus acquisition performance compared to previous models. Canon investigated a few of these issues, and some are believed to be resolved in firmware release 1.1.1, which was released in September 2007.
Most significant of the issues is the autofocus (AF) issue; under certain conditions, (notably warm, bright, sunny days, conditions under which AF usually operates the best) photographer Rob Galbraith has reported poor AF performance.[6] As of October 17, 2007, Canon technical representatives began stating the widely reported auto focus issue is suspected to be caused by an internal submirror assembly that requires replacement on most Cameras with serial numbers between 501001 and 546561[7] This correction has been made in production models dating to sometime shortly before the announcement of the fix.
As of August 2008, some reviewers have continued to note some level of remaining problems with AF both in the EOS-1D Mark III and EOS-1Ds Mark III even after the hardware and firmware fixes noted by Canon.[8]
On March 3, 2009, Canon announced new firmware and a free AF recalibration for the 1D Mark III. Initial reports from owners who have received their camera back from the AF recalibration seem to be largely positive, although there are still some mixed results.
This latest firmware available for the EOS-1D Mark III is version 1.3.2. The latest upgrades to the firmware for the Canon EOS-1D Mark III can be found on Canon's firmware download page.[9]