Canon EOS 30D review

The EOS 20D is dead - long live the 30D!

The addition of spot metering is welcome and, indeed, overdue

TechRadar Verdict

The 30D is a nice camera with superb continuous-shooting performance and all the features most amateurs will ever need

Pros

  • +

    Excellent build quality

    Excellent exposure, contrast and colour rendition

    Very good autofocus and exposure systems

Cons

  • -

    Fine detail rendition soemtimes disappointing

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The EOS 30D is designed for keen photographers who've outgrown entry-level models like the EOS 350D or Nikon D50, but who don't quite have the budget for a professional digital SLR.

More than a few professional photographers might be tempted, too, by the 30D's solid build quality and sophisticated photographic functions. Sports and action photographers will be very impressed by its ability to shoot at five frames per second, and for up to 30 shots at a time.

Picture performance

Once you get used to it, the 30D's a slick and easy-to-use camera. You'll appreciate its relatively clean, uncluttered design and its strong construction. Your first batch of pictures, though, may dent this confidence a little. There's a softness about the fine detail that sends you scurrying off to the camera settings to make sure you've got the sharpening enabled.

But no, all's as it should be. It just seems that the standard output is just that little bit soft. You can sharpen shots up later in your image editor, but it would be better still if you didn't have to. Shooting RAW makes little difference, and if you hike the sharpness settings too high in the supplied Digital Photo Pro conversion software, you start to get CCD artefacts and rogue edge pixels round high contrast edges.

In other respects, however, the image quality is excellent. The evaluative metering produces consistently good exposures, and the results aren't too contrasty - there are fewer 'blown' highlights with this camera than we've seen with other EOS models.

The colour rendition's especially good, but will you really have the patience to experiment with Canon's Picture Styles? Given that these are all independently customisable, and that it's not immediately clear how they dovetail with the camera's scene modes, it all gets a bit confusing.

Ultimately, the pictures produced by the 30D aren't really very different to those produced by the 20D, so that while the camera itself is undoubtedly better specified, you have to wonder whether Canon's done enough in a market which has seen some big changes.

And one of the biggest has been the launch of Nikon's D200. This has a higher resolution sensor, which, in our tests produces sharper shots, and it's also a very well-made camera. The 30D's a modest step up from the 20D, but the competition has come on in leaps and bounds.

Via PhotoRadar

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