Canon EOS 600D

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Canon EOS 600D/EOS Rebel T3i/EOS Kiss X5
Type Digital single-lens reflex camera
Sensor CMOS APS-C 22.3 × 14.9 mm (1.6x conversion factor)
Maximum resolution 5,184×3,456 (18.0 effective megapixels)
Lens Canon EF lens mount, Canon EF-S lens mount
Flash E-TTL II automatic built-in pop-up
Shutter focal-plane
Shutter speed range 1/4000 to 30 sec and bulb, 1/200 s X-sync
Exposure metering Full aperture TTL, 63-zone SPC
Exposure modes Full Auto, Portrait, Landscape, Close-up, Sports, Night Portrait, No Flash, Program AE, Shutter-priority, Aperture-priority, Manual, Auto Depth-of-field, Movie
Metering modes Evaluative, Spot (4% at center), Partial (9% at center), Center-weighted average
Focus areas 9 AF points, (f/5.6 cross type at centre, extra sensitivity at f/2.8)
Focus modes AI Focus, One-Shot, AI Servo, Live View
Continuous shooting 3.7 frame/s for 34 JPEG or 6 RAW frames
Viewfinder Eye-level pentamirror SLR, 95% coverage, 0.85× magnification, and electronic (Live View)
ASA/ISO range ISO 100 to 6400 (expandable to 12800)
Flash bracketing Yes
Custom WB Auto, Daylight, Shade, Cloudy, Tungsten, Fluorescent, Flash, Custom
WB bracketing +/- 3 stops for 3 frames
Rear LCD monitor 3 in 3:2 color TFT LCD, 1,040,000 dots
Storage Secure Digital Card
Secure Digital High Capacity
Secure Digital Extended Capacity
Battery LP-E8 Lithium-Ion rechargeable battery
Dimensions 133.1 mm × 99.5 mm × 79.7 mm
Weight 560 g (20 oz) (including battery and card)
Optional battery packs BG-E8 grip
Made in Taiwan/Japan

The Canon EOS 600D is an 18.0 megapixel digital single-lens reflex camera, released by Canon on 7 February 2011.[1] It is known as the EOS Kiss X5 in Japan and the EOS Rebel T3i in the Americas. The 600D is the second Canon EOS camera with an articulating LCD screen and supersedes the 550D, although the earlier model was not discontinued until June 2012, when the successor of the 600D, the 650D, was announced.

Feature list

  • 18.0 effective megapixel APS-C CMOS sensor
  • Full HD 1080p video recording at 24/25/30 frame/s
  • HD 720p and 640×480 video recording at 50/60 frame/s
  • 3–10× Digital Zoom in video recording (available only in 1080p).
    • One reviewer concluded that this feature takes a 1920×1080 crop from the middle of the sensor frame for the "3×" zoom, but was unable to confirm this with Canon.[2] This feature has not been included in any subsequent models of the Rebel line, or in the EOS M mirrorless camera, but returned with the 2013 release of the EOS 70D.
  • DIGIC 4 image processor
  • 14-bit analog to digital signal conversion
  • 3.0-inch (76 mm) Vari-angle 3:2 aspect ratio LCD articulating screen.
    • The screen, inherited from the mid-range 60D, is also notable in that its aspect ratio matches that of the sensor—a rare feature among DSLRs at the time of introduction.[3]
  • Live view mode
  • Built in flash with Speedlite wireless multi-flash support
  • 9 point AF with centre cross-type sensor sensitive at f/2.8
  • Four metering modes, using 63 zones: spot, partial, center-weighted average, and evaluative metering.
  • Highlight tone priority
  • EOS integrated cleaning system
  • sRGB and Adobe RGB colour spaces
  • ISO 100–6,400 expandable to 12,800
  • Continuous drive up to 3.7 frame/s (34 images (JPEG), 6 images (RAW))
  • SD, SDHC, and SDXC memory card file storage
  • RAW and large JPEG simultaneous recording
  • Eye-Fi support
  • USB 2.0, HDMI interface
  • LP-E8 battery

Video

As with many DSLRs and unlike the SLT cameras, the 600D does not have continuous auto-focus while filming video; to keep a moving subject in focus the user must either trigger the auto-focus, as when shooting stills, or track the subject's motion manually.

See also

References

  1. "Canon Rebel T3i / EOS 600D announced and previewed". Digital Photography Review. 7 February 2011. Retrieved 7 February 2011. 
  2. Laing, Gordon (April 2011). "Canon EOS 600D / Rebel T3i Movie Mode". CameraLabs.com. Retrieved 4 September 2011. 
  3. Laing, Gordon (April 2011). "Canon EOS 600D / Rebel T3i design and controls". CameraLabs.com. Retrieved 16 October 2011. 

External links

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