First Impressions
The most immediately compelling feature of the EOS 100D is of course its small form factor. A redesign of internal components has allowed Canon to produce a miniaturized APS-C DSLR that is surprisingly close in size to the company's mirrorless model, the EOS M. What's equally as impressive though is how much the 100D operates and behaves like any other recent generation Rebel-series camera. Indeed, it gives up very little in functionality to the co-announced EOS 700D which, though not an overly large camera by any stretch, is still significantly bulkier than the 100D.
Commonly used shooting controls can be accessed via external control points, and the mode dial rotates freely without the hard stop still found on most Canon DSLRs. You can also adjust settings via the 100D's comprehensive touchscreen interface, the same one we first saw (and enjoyed using) on the EOS 650D. The 100D's hand grip is deep enough to provide comfortable camera support, although when you first hold the camera in the shooting position it may take a moment to adjust to the fact that there's so little body area beyond the edge of the rear LCD.
While very similar in features and functionality to the 700D, the 100D does introduce the second generation of Canon's hybrid AF system. The focusing speed of the updated hybrid phase and contrast-detect design remains unchanged, which unfortunately means that it still lags behind current mirrorless cameras from Sony, Olympus and Panasonic. What has changed in the new version, however, is significantly wider AF coverage, with the hybrid system now available across the majority of the live view area, in contrast to the much smaller center area to which it was limited in the EOS M and 650D cameras. We look forward to detailed comparisons in our full review, but when coupled with the co-announced 18-55mm STM lens, the 100D should in principle offer a better overall experience of live view focusing than any other EOS camera.
Although we haven't had long with the EOS 100D, our first impressions are quite favorable. The camera's significant size reduction fortunately doesn't come at the expense of greatly reduced operability. The camera packs no fewer than nine external buttons on the rear of the camera, plus a 4-way controller. A reasonably bright viewfinder provides image magnification that is on par with entry-level DSLR competitors. Some compromises have to be made to size reduction, of course. The loss of real estate on the back of the camera pushes the AF/AE lock button further down and near the right edge of the body, making it more awkward to reach with your thumb when holding the camera in the shooting position. And compared to the EOS 700D, you sacrifice flash range and lose the ability to wirelessly trigger external Speedlites.
Overall, the EOS 100D owes much of its operational performance and behavior to previous Rebel-series cameras. This is no surprise, as Canon is typically conservative with iterations of its popular entry-level lineup. The fact that the EOS 100D can retain so much of the Rebel heritage at such a dramatic reduction of size and weight is a testament to some clever under-the-hood engineering. Has Canon managed to pull off an equivalent Rebel-shooting experience in a DSLR that is sized to give mirrorless models a run for their money? We look forward to receiving a production sample to run through our tests and find out.
Canon EOS 100D / Rebel SL1 Preview Samples Gallery
We've been lucky enough to get our hands on a pre-production sample of the EOS 100D, and have assembled a quick samples gallery to give an idea of how it performs. We've shot using the EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS STM and EF 40mm f/2.8 STM pancake lenses, and aimed to cover a variety of subjects and lighting conditions
There are 27 images in our samples gallery. Please do not reproduce any of these images on a website or any newsletter / magazine without prior permission (see our copyright page). We make the originals available for private users to download to their own machines for personal examination or printing (in conjunction with this review), we do so in good faith, please don't abuse it.
Unless otherwise noted images taken with no particular settings at full resolution. Because our review images are now hosted on the 'galleries' section of dpreview.com, you can enjoy all of the new galleries functionality when browsing these samples. Note that the camera used for these samples was pre-production and image quality should be considered 'Beta' standard.
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| Canon EOS 100D / Rebel SL1 Preview Samples Gallery - posted 10th April 2013 |
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