Dos cosas me han parecido un poco raras en este doble análisis que publica hoy el supergurú californiano Ken Rockwell.
Lo primero es que en sus habituales apartados de «lo bueno», «lo malo» y «lo que echa en falta» no hay apartado de «lo malo» cuando siempre lo ha habido. ¿ Será que estas cámaras no tienen nada malo o por lo menos mejorable, o será que hay maletines de por medio ? El agudo lector seguro que sabrá encontrar una sesuda y razonable respuesta a este enigma.
Lo segundo es que en el análisis no hay ni una puñetera muestra, ni a tamaño real ni a tamaño sello, y eso tampoco es nada habitual.
Así pues los análisis no son más que las hojas de especificaciones comentadas y en estas condiciones pasaré de puntillas sobre ellos:
- Hablando de la EOS 77D:
Good
- 45-point AF system.
- Can shoot-through the flicker of fluorescent, LED and vapor and lighting often found in gyms, restaurants, arenas and auditoriums so you won’t get randomly underexposed or off-color shots at fast shutter speeds.
- High quality: Made in Japan and has free 100% USA customer support at (800) OK-CANON.
- «Bulb Timer» lets us set an exact exposure time up to 100 hours, with no need for any remote release (not in Rebel T7i).
- [Q] Quick-Control button to get to most settings just like Canon’s pro cameras.
- Swiveling touch LCD make it very fast to set, probably faster than Canon’s pro cameras without touch screens!
- Rear dial around the four-way controller (not in Rebel T7i).
- Electronic movie stabilization.
- Automatic lens aberration correction for vignetting, lateral color fringes, distortion and diffraction, presuming the camera has a lens profile installed. All corrections are ON by default, except for distortion, and most recent popular lenses already have their profile installed.
- HDR and time-lapse movies.
- WiFi.
- NFC.
- Bluetooth.
- Selectable one-axis level and viewfinder grids; but the viewfinder level is just a three-position icon for left/OK/right roll; use the rear LCD for more level detail.
- Depth-of-field preview button.
- Locking Mode Dial (not locking in Rebel T7i).
- 3:2, 4:3, 16:9 and square aspect ratios with finder lines (MENU > Camera 5 > Aspect Ratio), but not actual finder masking.
- Top LCD (not in Rebel T7i).
Missing
- No C modes on dial; have to set and reset everything manually as you change shooting conditions — but people who get this camera rarely know how to set all that anyway.
- Has Auto ISO, but no way to adjust the slowest shutter speed; always bases it on focal length.
- No GPS (use the GP-E2 GPS).
- No battery percentage indication, just a three-segment icon.
- No LCD auto brightness control.
- No AF Fine Tuning.
Y todo lo demás lo encontraréis aquí: Ken Rockwell: Canon 77D
- Hablando de la EOS 800D (que allí se llama T7i):
Good
- First Rebel with a 45-point AF system.
- Can shoot-through the flicker of fluorescent, LED and vapor and lighting often found in gyms, restaurants, arenas and auditoriums so you won’t get randomly underexposed or off-color shots at fast shutter speeds.
- High quality: Made in Japan and has free 100% USA customer support at (800) OK-CANON.
- [Q] Quick-Control button to get to most settings just like Canon’s pro cameras.
- Swiveling touch LCD make it very fast to set, probably faster than Canon’s pro cameras without touch screens!
- Electronic movie stabilization.
- Automatic lens aberration correction for vignetting, lateral color fringes, distortion and diffraction, presuming the camera has a lens profile installed. All corrections are ON by default, except for distortion, and most recent popular lenses already have their profile installed.
- HDR and time-lapse movies.
- WiFi.
- NFC.
- Bluetooth.
- Selectable one-axis level and viewfinder grids; but the viewfinder level is just a three-position icon for left/OK/right roll; use the rear LCD for more level detail.
- Depth-of-field preview button.
- 3:2, 4:3, 16:9 and square aspect ratios with finder lines (MENU > Camera 5 > Aspect Ratio), but not actual finder masking.
Missing
- No C modes on dial; have to set and reset everything manually as you change shooting conditions — but people who get this camera rarely know how to set all that anyway.
- Has Auto ISO, but no way to adjust the slowest shutter speed; always bases it on focal length.
- No GPS (use the GP-E2 GPS).
- No battery percentage indication, just a three-segment icon.
- No LCD auto brightness control.
- No AF Fine Tuning.
- No rear control dial (present in 77D).
- No Bulb Timer (present in 77D).
- No lock on mode dial (present in 77D).
- No top LCD (present in 77D), but who needs a top LCD when there’s a bigger, better one on the back?
Y todo lo demás lo encontraréis aquí: Ken Rockwell: EOS 800D