Auto Focus LAG is (roughly) the amount of time it takes the camera to autofocus (a half-press and hold of the shutter release button), this timing is normally the most variable as its affected by the subject matter, current focus position, still or moving subject etc. This timing is an average. Shutter Release LAG is the amount of time it takes to take the shot from the moment you fully depress the shutter release button, measured both as a time including auto focus and a time assuming you have already pre-focused by holding a half-press of the shutter release.
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| Image Type | Frames per sec | Max no. of frames *1 |
Wait before |
| 2048 x 1536 Super-Fine JPEG | 1.87 fps | 7 | 1.4 secs |
| 2048 x 1536 Fine JPEG | 1.88 fps | 12 | 1.6 secs |
| 1600 x 1200 Fine JPEG | 1.68 fps | 19 | 1.2 secs |
| 1024 x 768 Fine JPEG | 2.02 fps | 42 | 1.0 secs |
| *1 | In a single "burst" (finger held down on shutter release) |
| *2 | You can take a frame as soon as there is space in the cameras internal buffer (writing continues "in the background"). |
This performance is highly favourable especially considering the A70's price, in the normal '2048 x 1536 Fine JPEG' mode the camera manages a fairly impressive 1.88 frames per second up to 12 frames. At 1600 x 1200 there's obviously a processing hit involved, hence the slower fps time, at 1024 x 768 (exactly half resolution) performance jumps back up again to 2.02 frames per second. Overall an excellent performance for this level of camera.
Timings shown below are the time taken for the camera to process and "flush" the image out to the CF card, the timer was started as soon as the shutter release was pressed and stopped when activity indicator LED beside the viewfinder stopped blinking. This means the timings also include the cameras processing time and as such are more representative of the actual time to "complete the task". The media used for these tests was a 256 MB SanDisk Ultra CF card.
| Image Type | Time
to write (secs) |
Time
to display (secs) |
File
size *1 (approx.) |
Images
on a *2 256 MB CF |
| 2048 x 1536 Super-Fine JPEG | 2.8 | 1.4 | 1,400 KB | 154 |
| 2048 x 1536 Fine JPEG | 2.4 | 1.1 | 850 KB | 276 |
| 1600 x 1200 Fine JPEG | 2.2 | 0.8 | 530 KB | 440 |
| 1024 x 768 Fine JPEG | 2.0 | 0.6 | 250 KB | 762 |
| *1 | All file sizes are an average of three files. As is the case with JPEG it's difficult to predict the size of an image because it will vary a fair amount depending on the content of the image (especially the amount of detail captured). For example, take a photograph of a fairly empty wall and you'll get a small JPEG, take a photograph of a bush with a lot of detail and you'll get a larger image. File sizes here are closer to the later, the larger size of file you should expect. |
| *2 | Camera estimation. |
Above average write speed for this level of camera, the time taken doesn't affect the next shot as writing continues in the background and the A70 has a good sized buffer.
This
test is designed to measure the minimum amount of light under which the
camera can still focus. The focus target is our lens distortion test chart
(shown here on the right), camera is positioned exactly 2 m (6.6 ft) away.
Light levels are gradually dropped until the camera can no longer focus. This is carried out at both wide angle and telephoto zoom positions (as more light reaches the focusing systems with a larger aperture).
This test target is the optimum type of subject for most "contrast detect" AF systems (as it has a vertical line at its center), you should consider the results below the best you could expect to achieve.
| Lens position | Aperture | Lowest light focus |
| Wide angle (35 mm equiv.) | F2.8 | 1.4 EV (6.6 Lux, 0.61 foot-candle) |
| Telephoto (105 mm equiv.) | F4.8 | 1.8 EV (8.7 Lux, 0.81 foot-candle) |
Light intensity (Lux) = 2.5 x 2^EV (@ ISO 100), 10.76391 Lux = 1 foot-candle (fc)
The A70's rather weak 'orange bulb' AF assist lamp casts a very diffused light without very much range. This is reflected in low light AF performance which should have at least managed to focus at wide angle in complete darkness but instead required at least a dim ambient light to achieve AF lock. There are AF assist lamps and there are AF assist lamps, this is not the best.
We ran the camera through our new battery life test. This test is designed to be fair and comparative to each camera and battery type:
Batteries are fully discharged and recharged before the test and all cameras were reset to their factory default settings. Here are the results:
Easily the most exhausting battery test we've carried out to date, the A70 kept going for just over five hours, and although not shown on this chart that's half an hour longer than its long lasting bigger brother the G5. A truly impressive performance on a set of four (moderate capacity) AA NiMH batteries. Kudos Canon.