View Full Version : Digital Rebel doesnt have FEB..
elfyrulz
5th of July 2004 (Mon), 23:03
:( I just red the manual and it didnt say anything about FEB(Flash Exposure Bracketing) which 10D seems to have. also It seems I can't use One Shot and AI Servo on 300D's Manual setting.
tpinchback
6th of July 2004 (Tue), 00:07
your right... no FEB or ai servo.
scottbergerphoto
6th of July 2004 (Tue), 06:55
As for FEB, if you get a 550EX, you can set it on the flash.
Regards,
Scott
elfyrulz
6th of July 2004 (Tue), 08:24
As for FEB, if you get a 550EX, you can set it on the flash.
Regards,
Scott
Does 420EX have FEB too?
drisley
6th of July 2004 (Tue), 08:25
If you get the russian hacked firmware, which everybody loves, you will be able to get FEC, and selectable AF methods.
However, no FEB. You would have to get the 550EX.
timmyquest
6th of July 2004 (Tue), 08:47
As for FEB, if you get a 550EX, you can set it on the flash.
Regards,
Scott
Does 420EX have FEB too?
No.
elfyrulz
6th of July 2004 (Tue), 19:22
can I do a flash Barcketing with 420EX?
scottbergerphoto
7th of July 2004 (Wed), 05:46
can I do a flash Barcketing with 420EX?
Not on the flash. If your camera body has it (10D, not Rebel), you can set it on the body.
Scott
theoldmoose
8th of July 2004 (Thu), 15:20
If this is important to you, hopefully you read it in the manual before you plunked down your hard-earned cash.
If not, my condolences. Chalk up another victim of Canon's 'market positioning' firmware-crippling practices.
robertwgross
9th of July 2004 (Fri), 01:49
I used to hear people complain:
"I don't get the manual until I open up the camera package. I can't read it in advance of the purchase."
Of course, that is bull.
Manuals are available, either online at the Canon site, or online someplace, or here, or somehow.
---Bob Gross---
scottbergerphoto
9th of July 2004 (Fri), 06:18
www.megapixel.net posts complete reviews of most digital cameras with all their specs.
Scott
robertwgross
9th of July 2004 (Fri), 11:17
If you read equipment reviews much, you will see a lot of variation for any one given piece. One "unbiased" reviewer may be anti-Canon, or anti-Nikon, or anti-Kodak, or anti-anything. Besides, some reviewers have been known to "dry-lab" the entire review/evaluation process. In other words, they simply regurgitate a summary of what everybody else has been saying without even holding the specific equipment.
A beginner reviewer may accidentally skip over some feature area because the manufacturer's data sheet did not mention that area. An expert reviewer would not be so likely to do that. If he knew he had a metric crescent wrench feature on his old Nikon, then he expects to see that on new Nikon equipment. If it isn't there, he would note that. The best reviewers get very methodical about details like that.
---Bob Gross---
scottbergerphoto
9th of July 2004 (Fri), 11:22
If you read equipment reviews much, you will see a lot of variation for any one given piece. One "unbiased" reviewer may be anti-Canon, or anti-Nikon, or anti-Kodak, or anti-anything. Besides, some reviewers have been known to "dry-lab" the entire review/evaluation process. In other words, they simply regurgitate a summary of what everybody else has been saying without even holding the specific equipment.
A beginner reviewer may accidentally skip over some feature area because the manufacturer's data sheet did not mention that area. An expert reviewer would not be so likely to do that. If he knew he had a metric crescent wrench feature on his old Nikon, then he expects to see that on new Nikon equipment. If it isn't there, he would note that. The best reviewers get very methodical about details like that.
---Bob Gross---
Bob,
If you look at the reviews on www.megapixel.net , you will find them to be highly detailed and very accurate as to specs and camera features. There is no reason anyone should ever buy a camera without knowing what features it has and doesn't. Opinions are one thing, facts/specs are another.
Scott
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