
Minolta DiMAGE 7Hi Review, Phil Askey, November 2002

Review based on a production DiMAGE 7Hi, firmware Ver 1.00u
On September 10th at Seybold SF Minolta revealed the
new black bodied DiMAGE 7Hi. Clearly another refresh of the original DiMAGE
7 design the 7Hi builds on the 7i's feature set and adds a considerable
range of improvements. These improvements are designed to push the camera
higher up the prosumer category with some unique features which we would
only expect to see in a D-SLR. Apart from the obvious colour change there
are plenty of internal improvements, buffer space has been increased to
deliver more continuous shooting 'depth' (number of shots before the buffer
fills), there's a new finer JPEG mode and notably the camera now supports
selectable colour space in-camera and can even embedded the ICC profile
into the JPEG header.
These new features do however come at a price, the DiMAGE
7Hi has a list price of $1,299, that's $300 more than it's earlier sibling
the DiMAGE 7i. The big question now is are those few new features and
increased buffer space worth the extra $300 and how does the 7Hi stack
up against the competition. We'll try to answer those questions in this
review.
Minolta DiMAGE 7Hi vs. DiMAGE 7i (differences only)
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Minolta
DiMAGE 7Hi |
Minolta
DiMAGE 7i |
| |
 |
 |
| List price |
$1,299 |
$999 |
| Body finish |
Matt black (mottled effect) |
Silver 'alloy' |
| Hand grip |
Soft rubber coated |
Plastic |
| Image formats |
RAW
Super Fine (TIFF)
Extra Fine (JPEG)
Fine (JPEG)
Standard (JPEG) |
RAW
Super Fine (TIFF)
Fine (JPEG)
Standard (JPEG)
Basic (JPEG) |
| Timed slow shutter |
Timed up to 15 secs *
Bulb up to 30 secs
* Depends on selected ISO |
Timed up to 4 secs
Bulb up to 30 secs |
| Max shutter speed |
Program AE : 1/4000 sec
Aperture Priority: 1/4000 sec
Shutter Priority: 1/2000 sec
Manual: 1/2000 sec |
All: 1/2000 sec |
| White Balance |
Auto
Daylight
Tungsten
Fluorescent 1
Fluorescent 2
Cloudy
Manual preset (1, 2, 3) |
Auto
Daylight
Tungsten
Fluorescent
Cloudy
Manual preset (custom) |
| Continuous drive |
UHS - 7 fps @ 1280 x 960
High-continuous - 3 fps (9 frames*)
Continuous - 2 fps (9 frames*)
* At 2560 x 1920 resolution |
UHS - 7 fps @ 1280 x 960
Continuous - 3 fps (3 frames*)
* At 2560 x 1920 resolution |
| Color modes |
Natural colour (sRGB)
Vivid colour (sRGB)
B&W (neutral or toned)
Solarization
Adobe RGB |
Vivid Colour
Natural Colour
B&W
Solarization |
| Embedded profile |
Yes, optional embedded ICC profile |
No |
| Quick View mode |
View last image
Browse images (single / thumbs)
View histogram / exposure info
Magnify image
Delete image |
View last image
Browse images (single / thumbs)
View histogram / exposure info
Delete image |
| Default settings |
Pro-Auto button
Pro-Auto Undo is available |
Pro-Auto button |
| Compliance |
Print Image Matching II
ExifPrint (EXIF 2.2) |
Print Image Matching
ExifPrint (EXIF 2.2) |
Custom controls
|
Memory Recall: Function Dial
/ DSP button
Control Dial (M mode): Shutter Speed / Aperture
Manual shift: On / Off
Bracketing: DEC control / Exposure
Color Profile: No / Embedded
Delete confirmation: "Yes" / "No" |
None |
| External flash |
PC Sync terminal
Minolta Hot-shoe |
Minolta Hot-shoe |
Review notes
Because of the 7Hi's similarity to the 7i much of the first half of this
review (body design / operation / display) is based on the 7i review.

If you're new to digital photography you may wish to read the Digital
Photography Glossary before diving into this review (it may help you
understand some of the terms used).
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Conclusion / Recommendation / Ratings are based
on the opinion of the reviewer, you should read the ENTIRE review
before coming to your own conclusions.
Images which can be viewed
at a larger size have a small magnifying glass icon in the bottom
right corner of the image, clicking on the image will display a
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To navigate the review simply
use the next / previous page buttons, to jump to a particular section
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DPReview calibrate their
monitors using Color Vision OptiCal at the (fairly well accepted)
PC normal gamma 2.2, this means that on our monitors we can make
out the difference between all of the (computer generated) grayscale
blocks below. We recommend to make the most of this review you should
be able to see the difference (at least) between X,Y and Z and ideally
A,B and C.
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This review is Copyright 2002 Phil
Askey and the review in part or in whole may NOT be reproduced in any
electronic or printed medium without prior permission from the author.
For information on reproducing any part of this review (or any images)
please contact: Phil Askey.
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