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The focusing screen on the AE-1 Program is brighter than any previous focusing screen on any Canon manual focus camera, allowing the user to focus with greater ease with "slow" lenses (up to f/5.6). It is the same focusing screen design that is used in the newest model of the top-of-the-line Canon F-1 (known as the New F-1).
Canon’s A series [1] [2] is Canon's amateur series [3] of manual focus 35 mm single lens reflex cameras. The first camera, the AE-1, was introduced in April 1976 [4] while the final camera, the AL-1, was released in March 1982. [5] All have a Canon FD lens mount compatible with Canon's extensive range of manual-focus lenses. Canon AE-1 with ...
Canon AE-1 detail. The AE-1 was the first in what became a complete overhaul of Canon's line of SLRs. The 1970s and 1980s were an era of intense competition between the major Japanese SLR brands: Canon, Nikon, Minolta, Pentax and Olympus. Between 1975 and 1985, there was a dramatic departure from heavy all-metal manual mechanical camera bodies ...
^Digital Camera Disasters: Will Yours Get Fixed? One widespread camera problem gets out-of-warranty repairs, another gets a lawsuit. (Grace Aquino, PC World, Tuesday 21 February 2006); ^ Repair guide; ^ IXUS 40 aka SD300 Repair Guide; ^ E18 quick fix (CNet Digital cameras forum); ^ Action by Horwitz, Horwitz & Associates at the Wayback Machine (archived 23 January 2013); ^ Investigation by ...
The front of the camera. The Canon T70 was a 35mm FD-mount single-lens reflex camera introduced in April 1984 as the second in Canon's T series. [1] The T70 started with the concepts explored in 1983's T50, took them further, and applied them to a more sophisticated camera.
Canon A-1 with a FD 50/1.8 Viewfinder of a Canon A-1. The right number is the current F-number (1.8), meaning that the aperture is fairly wide open. The left number (45) indicates the approximate shutter speed of 45 −1 s (the camera can select odd shutter speeds, but does not display them)
The Canon EOS 5 (sold as the EOS A2 and A2e in the USA) is a semi-professional autofocus, autoexposure 35 mm SLR film camera. It was sold from November 1992 onwards, and was replaced in late 1998 by the Canon EOS 3. [1] As part of the EOS line of cameras, the 5/A2/A2e utilized Canon's EF bayonet lens mount, first introduced in 1987.
Canon in 2011 made the first fisheye zoom lens, both circular and rectangular. That lens was the Canon EF 8-15mm f/4L Fisheye USM. Canon in 2012 made the first wide angle lens with Image Stabilization. That lens was the Canon EF 24mm f/2.8 IS USM. Canon in 2013 created the first telephoto with built-in 1.4× extender.