| Overview | |
|---|---|
| Maker | Canon Inc. |
| Type | Single-lens reflex withdigital back |
| Lens | |
| Lens mount | Canon EF |
| Lens | Interchangeable |
| Sensor/medium | |
| Sensor | CCD, 1.6xcrop factor (APS-C) |
| Maximumresolution | 1,728 x 1,152 (2.0megapixels) |
| Film speed | 200-1600 in 1 EV steps |
| Storage media | 340MBPCMCIA cards |
| Focusing | |
| Focus modes | One-shot, AI-Servo, AI-Focus, Manual |
| Focus areas | 5 points |
| Focus bracketing | none |
| Exposure/metering | |
| Exposure modes | Full auto, programmed, shutter-priority, aperture priority, manual |
| Exposuremetering | TTL, full aperture, zones |
| Metering modes | Evaluative, Center Weighted, Average |
| Flash | |
| Flash | Canon hotshoe |
| Flash bracketing | none |
| Shutter | |
| Shutter | electronic focal plane |
| Shutter speed range | 30 to 1/8000 s |
| Continuous shooting | up to 3.6 frame/s, max 12 frames |
| Viewfinder | |
| Viewfinder | Optical |
| Image processing | |
| White balance | 5 presets, including Auto and custom |
| WB bracketing | none |
| General | |
| LCD screen | none |
| Battery | Removable, rechargeable NiCD battery |
| Optionalbattery packs | none |
| Weight | 1,650 g (58 oz) (body only) |
TheCanon EOS D2000 (aCanon branded Kodak DCS 520) is a 2-megapixeldigital single-lens reflex camera developed byKodak on aCanon EOS-1N body. It was released in March 1998.[1] It features a CCD sensor and can shoot at 3.5 frames per second. Many enthusiasts regard the D2000 as Canon's first truly usable Digital SLR. It was released in tandem with theCanon EOS D6000 (a rebrandedKodak DCS 560), a 6-megapixel model.
Like its predecessor, theEOS DCS 3, the D2000 uses an EOS-1 N camera body with a Kodakdigital back. However, the digital back was completely redesigned, being better integrated into the body, using a higher-resolutionAPS-C sized sensor, adding a secondPCMCIA card slot, replacing theSCSI interface with anIEEE 1394 interface, and adding a color screen for viewing images that had been taken, a feature that was lacking from the DCS 3 and the higher-endDCS 1. Other incremental improvements such as a higher shooting rate and a swappable, rechargeable battery pack were included.
The D2000 was the last of the Kodak / Canon press cameras. It was sold by Kodak until at least as late as 2001.[2] Canon's first home-grown professional digital SLR, theCanon EOS-1D, was released later the same year.
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