
Flash
The EOS-10D provides a wide range of flash photography
options. The built-in E-TTL flash unit is useful for everyday snapshots,
it's fairly powerful and produces no color cast. There is also an E-TTL
compatible hotshoe for flash units such as the Canon 420EX or 550EX as
well as an 'industry standard' PC sync terminal for use with off-camera
flash or studio strobe systems. The samples below were shot within a few
seconds of each other to give a (rough) impression of the differences
between each and to check colour accuracy.
Settings:
ISO 100, EF 100 mm Macro F2.8L, Large/Fine
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| Studio strobes (1/200 sec, F11) |
Built-in flash (1/200 sec, F7.1) |
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| Canon 550EX Direct (1/200 sec, F7.1) |
Canon 550EX Bounced (1/200 sec, F5) |
Studio setup: 2 x Elinchrom 300W strobes (1 x 70 cm softbox).

Long Exposure noise reduction / Night shots
Just like the EOS-D60 the EOS-10D carries out its long
exposure noise reduction 'on the fly', this means that it doesn't need
to take a second 'dark frame' exposure to subtract noise. As soon as the
exposure has finished it is immediately displayed on the LCD monitor.
Typical night exposures
Below you can see a couple of typical night exposures, one at four seconds,
the other at eight seconds. At these exposures the EOS-10D is very clean,
no more noise than we see in normally lit shots and certainly no visible
'stuck pixels'.
Settings:
ISO 100, EF 28-70 mm F2.8L, Large/Fine
The four minute exposure
This was a surprise, the four minute (actually 3.7 minutes) exposure
below certainly turned London night into day (a hazy night with plenty
of light pollution). However the image also contains a fair amount of
'stuck pixel' noise, far more than we saw with the identical long exposure
test on the EOS-D60. That
said I'm sure there won't be that many people executing such long exposures.
Settings:
ISO 100, EF 28-70 mm F2.8L, Large/Fine, 222 sec, F20
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