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Canon EOS 350D review

In this review

Features
The Canon EOS 350D loosens a number of the restrictions that bound other Canons. It offers more flexibility with respect to metering mode, with easily selectable evaluative, partial, or centre-weighted average metering (but still no spot metering). There are also more options with flash-exposure control and autofocus selection via the One Shot, AI Servo, and AI Focus modes.




The EOS 350D saves images on CompactFlash cards and Microdrives

The EOS 350D can simultaneously record raw and high-quality JPEG files. You can also override the automatic seven-point AiAF focusing -- a good thing, given its occasional unreliability -- but doing so requires first pushing a button to initialise the process, then navigating to one of the seven points using either the directional buttons or the main dial. It's a little clunky, but you can actually streamline the process by changing the camera's custom settings to eliminate the first step.

Shooting choices include the four basic exposure modes, a depth-of-field priority mode, a fully automatic mode, and six scene options: Portrait, Landscape, Close-up, Sports, Night Portrait, and Flash Off. The EOS 350D provides colour-space options of either Adobe RGB or the default sRGB. It also allows tinkering with sharpness, contrast, and colour through the menu's Parameter settings. A black-and-white mode has trickled down from Canon's EOS 20D as well.

This camera also features adjustable white-balance bracketing and exposure bracketing. As with its predecessor and similarly priced 'advanced amateur' dSLR models, the EOS 350D offers a maximum ISO of 1,600; it can't capture TIFF files, and it doesn't allow the white balance to be set according to colour temperature. Nine custom settings allow you to control such parameters as flash-sync speed (to 1/200 second), exposure-level increments (from 1/3-stop to 1/2-stop), and shutter-curtain sync (first- and second-curtain flash sync).

Along with other software, the EOS 350D comes with Canon's excellent Digital Photo Professional 1.6 program for raw file processing. It also supports Canon's sophisticated E-TTLII external-flash system and is compatible with an optional vertical grip that adds more battery power and a second shutter release. For wireless multiple-flash support, you'll have to purchase an accessory transmitter -- one respect in which this camera falls short of Nikon's D70 and D70s.

Performance
The Canon EOS 350D continues the trend of increasing speed in consumer-grade dSLR models. Particularly impressive is its nearly instantaneous start-up time. In our tests, we fired up the camera and took a shot in only 0.2 second. The shutter lag was a miniscule 0.2 second at its slowest -- this is a very responsive camera. We clocked a shot-to-shot time of just 0.4 second when shooting raw files and slightly less when shooting only high-resolution, low-compression JPEGs.

Less impressive was the camera's continuous-shooting speed, which in our tests for JPEGs scored a little less than the 3 frames per second (fps) claimed by Canon, for only 10 frames, compared with Canon's claim of 14. Interestingly enough, the rate was closer to 4fps when shooting raw files, but the buffer filled after only 5 shots. This is one key area in which Canon obviously seeks to maintain distance between the capabilities of the consumer EOS 350D and those of the semi-professional EOS 20D.

The EOS 350D's viewfinder provides 95 percent coverage, which is typical for its class, and it's sufficiently clear and bright. Its 46mm (1.8-inch) LCD is also sharp and bright, though it can still be challenging to read in open sunlight.




The EOS 350D uses the same kind of small, rechargeable battery that some of Canon's point-and-shoots use, but we still got more than 1,100 shots out of it under normal conditions

The EOS 350D uses Canon's diminutive NB-2LH lithium-ion battery pack, which is the same one used by point-and-shoots such as the PowerShot S60. That explains, in part, the EOS 350D's smaller, lighter form factor (the previous model used the larger BP-511A battery). It also speaks to the power efficiencies of the Digic II processor. The EOS 350D was good for more than 1,100 frames of normal use with a moderate flash before the low-battery indicator appeared.

The Canon EOS 350D makes gloriously detailed 8-megapixel images and offers unsurpassed image quality for a consumer dSLR. That said, a comparison of output shot with the EF-S 18mm-to-55mm f/3.5-to-f/5.6 zoom lens included with the kit and Canon's fantastic EF 24mm-to-70mm f/2.8 zoom (which retails for more than the EOS 350D itself) reveals the limitations of the kit lens. The former's output was prone to softness on telephoto settings, slight barrel distortion at the 18mm end, and fringing around backlit borders. While these flaws were relatively minor, the output of the big-money lens revealed just what the EOS 350D is capable of: tack-sharp images with a superior tonal range and extraordinary detail from shadows to highlights. For those reasons, we'd recommend buying the EOS 350D body without the kit lens and investing in even a moderately better one; the EOS 350D is capable of so much more.

Even with the shortcomings of the kit lens, image quality was impressive. Colours were saturated and generally natural, although the automatic white balance tended towards the warm and yellowish in some situations. We recommend shooting raw files for the best quality and so that you can make white-balance adjustments after shooting if necessary. Noise levels are remarkably low and barely noticeable at ISO settings less than 1,600. Even at 1,600, we found the noise to be very manageable. If you use long exposures, you can also turn on Canon's noise-reduction filter through the custom settings.

Edited by Aimee Baldridge
Additional editing by Tom Espiner

User reviews8

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Andrew_Field's avatar
5 stars out of 5

Andrew_Field 23 April 2011

Comment: I previously owned a Canon EOS100 SLR camera and had several lenses for it and also had a "point and shoot" Canon Powershot A70 digital compact camera.

Having taken some wonderful pictures with the SLR as well as lots of dire ones, and having discovered the convenience of digital photography, the release of the 350D made me finally take teh step into buying a digital SLR. It is fully compatible with my existing lenses and the 18-55mm lens supplied is also a useful and versatile addition.

The beauty of digital photography is the immediacy of being able to review what you have shot as soon as the picture is taken. This, and the fact tbat you don't need to buy film and have it developed after the event means I now take many more photographs and can experiment with the settings on the camera with much more confidence and learn more about photography in the process.

I actually took a pretty heavy fall holding the camera and dropped it on a concrete patio in the process and although it is scratched and the lens slightly damaged, both the camera and lens are working fine still which is very impressive for a sophisticated piece of electronics.

Highly recommended, especially if you already own Canon lenses or other equipment.

*** P.S. If you will buy this Camera I suggest at: amazon.co.uk/dp/B0007R6CHQ/?tag=reviews.cnet.co.uk-21

I own it
Harry Milligan's avatar

Harry Milligan 18 November 2010

Comment: first DSLR, WELL PLEASED..

I own it
mcppowe57's avatar
4.5 stars out of 5

mcppowe57 2 September 2008

Good: SLR

Bad: Weight

Comment: Great camera

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