Under your thumb
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On the right side of the camera "under your thumb" are two buttons. The AE lock button (press to read and lock exposure, can be re-programmed) and the AF point selection button (press to select AF point, AF point selection can also be re-programmed). |
Shooting mode
Play mode
Shutter button / AE lock button function (C.Fn 4)
Most sports photographers will prefer to use setting
1 or 3 where you can control WHEN the camera AF executes, a simple press
of your thumb will start AF, then you can fire off as many shots as you
like (more quickly obviously) without the camera refocusing, plus you
can manual focus once the AF has completed.
| Custom Function 4 |
Setting |
Shutter button half-press |
AE Lock button |
0 |
AE, AF |
AE lock |
1 |
AE lock (shutter release priority) |
AE, AF |
2 |
AE, AF |
AF lock (no AE lock) |
3 |
AE (shutter release priority) |
AE, AF (no AE lock) |
AF point selection method (C.Fn 13)
Personally I preferred setting 1 which allows you to simply press the multi-controller to select an AF point or press the the AF point selection button to return to auto AF selection mode.
| Custom Function 13 |
Setting |
AF point selection method |
0 |
Press AF point selection then use dial / multi-controller |
1 |
Push multi-controller to select AF point, selection button for Auto |
2 |
Quick control dial to select AF point, selection button has no function |
Rear of camera controls

As noted earlier in this review the considerably enlarged LCD monitor has pushed rear control outwards, notably the buttons which run down the left side are closer to the edge of the camera. I wish Canon had followed Nikon's lead and used larger buttons. Apart from one new button (the relatively pointless 'print / share' button, which should in my opinion be a customizable button with direct print as its default) the rear of the EOS 30D is unremarkably similar to the EOS 20D.
Shooting mode
Play mode
Lens mount controls
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On the side of the lens mount are the final set of camera controls. First is the flash open button, a press of this (in the right mode) will pop-up the onboard flash. Next down is the lens release button and below this the depth of field preview button which stops the lens down to the indicated / selected aperture to give a preview of DOF in the viewfinder.
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