Below you'll find a quick reference to what's new and
what has been improved since the EOS-D30. This page is really intended
for existing EOS-D30 owners.
 |
 |
6.3 megapixel CMOS sensor (3072
x 2048 final image size)
Canon are fairly unique in the D-SLR arena (apart from Fujifilm)
in that they design and produce their own sensors. The D30 and now
D60 are unique in being the only D-SLR's to use a CMOS sensor (although
Sigma's SD9 will soon be using a Foveon X3 CMOS sensor). |
Maintained 3 fps, 8 images
max
Assuming a 12-bit ADC the D30 produced 4.64 MB of data every time
you pressed the shutter release. The D60 takes that to 9.32 MB for
each shot, so it's impressive that (at this price point) Canon has
managed to maintain a three frames per second shooting speed and a
buffer large enough to hold a maximum of eight frames. |
 |
 |
Improved buffer
The D60 now displays the status of the buffer on the viewfinder
status bar. It also uses it more smartly and allows you to take photos
as quickly as you can press the shutter release, even in single shot
drive mode. |
Improved low-light auto-focus
Canon described this as "AF performance in low light environments
has been improved". This, it turns out actually relates to the
way the AF lamp operates in conjunction with the camera's AF system. |
 |
 |
Shorter shutter release lag
This is noticeable, the camera seems more 'keen' immediately after
the click of the shutter release button. It's interesting because
it's not something I'd particularly noticed with the D30 but the D60
does feel faster. |
Highlighted AF points in viewfinder
view (works for AF and MF and point selection)
This feature was delivered inside the pentaprism below the flash unit
and can be seen as a small rectangular bump below the Canon logo on
the front of the camera. When selecting AF points the selected point
glows in red. When auto-focusing the selected (or automatically selected)
AF point glows and when manually focusing the point glows when manual
focus matches the detected AF distance. |
 |
 |
| Reduced maximum sensitivity
- ISO 1000 (D30 supports ISO 1600) - It does seem a shame that
we've lost the ISO 1600 of the D30. Looking at ISO 1000 images from
the D60 I see no image quality reason for not having ISO 1600 so this
must be a technical limitation. |
New laser matte focusing screen
Just slightly noticeable as the viewfinder seems a little brighter. |
 |
 |
Parameters can be set in-camera
(contrast, sharpness, saturation, color tone)
This was one of the complaints from my D30 review and it's a welcome
addition, it makes setting and experimenting with the cameras internal
processing parameters far easier. It's a shame though that in doing
so Canon didn't expand the range by which you can adjust each parameter,
still only +/-1 level (which is hardly noticeable). |
New 'Color tone' parameter
The color tone option enables you to make a subtle adjustment to the
default white balance. The EOS-D60 manual describes -1 as shifting
towards red and +1 as shifting towards yellow. This appears to be
intended at producing a more natural skin tone for models with different
coloured skin. |
 |
 |
Top LCD panel has LED illuminator
I can hear the sighs of relief on the Canon SLR Talk forum already.
When enabled the top panel illuminates when ever the SET button on
the rear of the camera is pressed. Illumination is provided via bluish
green LED's. (Shot above taken in complete darkness) |
Improved LCD monitor
Although the same physical unit as last year Canon has applied
a new surface and improved the overall brightness of the screen, it's
easier to see off-axis and appears to be overall much brighter. |
 |
 |
Tweaked image display gamma
This makes it easier to see the darker areas of the image and helps
to show a more representative view of the image (sometimes the D30
playback looks a little dark). |
Tweaked daylight white balance
The cameras daylight (sunny) white balance has been shifted slightly
(from 5500 K on the D30 to 5200K on the D60). This, apparently after
Canon's own analysis of images shot by owners. |
 |
 |
New long exposure noise reduction
Instead of having to wait double the length of time of the original
exposure (as with the D30) the D60 has cleaned the image in just a
second or so. Gone also is the long exposure custom function, it's
now permanently enabled. |
Firmware version displayed
on menu
A small tweak but one which could be useful where several D60's
are in use it quickly allows you to see what firmware version is loaded
on the camera. |
 |
 |
New Medium image size
Large: 3072 x 2048
Medium: 2048 x 1360
Small: 1536 x 1024
Shooting RAW (3072 x 2048) also captures a 2048 x 1360 which is embedded
WITHIN the RAW file. |
New RAW conversion software
Improved workflow, faster RAW conversion times "and about time
to", gone is the woefully inadequate RAW converter from the D30
to be replaced with the improved application we first saw on the EOS-1D.
You can now also extract 2048 x 1360 JPEG's from RAW files at very
high speed. |
 |
 |
Attached rubber covers for
flash sync terminal and remote terminal
You won't lose these because they're attached to the camera. |
Silver mode dial
I personally don't like this, it detracts from the rest of the
camera and simply looks odd. I suppose it makes the D60 easier to
recognize from a distance (?). |
 |
 |
Improved power switch
The D30's power switch was always criticized for its difficult
operation. The new switch is similar but the simple extension of the
center ridge of the switch makes it a lot easier to operate. |
'Digital' logo on camera front
Canon's new standard D-SLR logo the 'Digital' label we first saw
on the EOS-1D now appears on the EOS-D60. |