Canon EOS 40D (body only)
Manufacturer: Canon USA Part number: 1901B004
- More product information:
- Editors' review
- User reviews
- Specifications
- Product series
- Accessories
- Manufacturer info
- Bottom Line:
- Great photo quality and excellent continuous-shooting performance are just two of the Canon EOS 40D's many attractions in the digital camera marketplace.
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Where to buy
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CNET editors' review
Canon EOS 40D (body only) price range: $1,099.00
- Reviewed by: Lori Grunin
- Reviewed on: 09/20/2007
- Updated on:10/02/2008
- Released on: 09/04/2007
The good: Generally superior shooting speed among dSLRs; first-rate photo quality.
The bad: Large spot size for spot meter; relatively sluggish low-light focus.
The bottom line: Great photo quality and excellent continuous-shooting performance are just two of the Canon EOS 40D's many attractions in the digital camera marketplace.
Editors' note: The competitive landscape for this camera has changed since our review, and we've updated the text and ratings to reflect that and the model's lower price. The design rating goes from a 9 to an 8--while still a nicely designed model, it's not particularly outstanding anymore--and features drops from an 8 to a 7 for its efficient-but-now-relatively-mundane set of capabilities. Text changes include comparisons to newer models.
Representing a more significant leap over the EOS 30D than the 30D was beyond the 20D, the Canon EOS 40D features a redesigned body and menu system, introduces some long-requested features, integrates some of the new technology from the EOS 1D Mark III and delivers a nice bump in resolution and performance. All of that, plus a solid overall increase in speed over its predecessor, make it a no-brainer upgrade from previous models, a substantially better option than its down-the-line sibling, the EOS Rebel XSi and a nice complement for the EOS-1D Mark III.
Canon offers two configurations of the 40D: body only, and a kit with the veteran f/3.5-to-f/5.6, 28mm-to-135mm IS USM lens. Taking into account the camera's 1.6x focal-length multiplier yields an angle of view equivalent to that of a 44.8mm-to-216mm lens on a 35mm camera. That's a bit narrow, though; personally, I think the admittedly pricey EF 24mm-to-70mm f/2.8L USM covers a more useful general-purpose range of 38.4mm to 112mm. Alternatively, you may want to wait until later this year when the inexpensive EF-S 18mm-to-55mm f/3.5-to-f/5.6 IS is slated to become available.
Despite the growth of the LCD from 2.5 to 3 inches, the body size and weight of the 40D is the same as that of the 30D: 4.2x5.7x2.9 inches and roughly 1.8 pounds. As with its predecessor, the body feels very solid and well made, one of the important advantages it has over the flimsier-feeling Rebel series. Canon added dust- and weatherproofing on the CF slot, the buttons, and all connection points, and it implemented the same integrated sensor-cleaning system that's in the Mark III series. The latter vibrates the sensor to dislodge dust during start-up and shut-down (pressing the shutter cancels cleaning during start-up), and if that doesn't work, a Dust Delete Data option enables the camera to analyze and remember where it senses dust and algorithmically remove it from photos.
The larger LCD did make it necessary to rejigger some of the controls. The Review, Delete, Jump, Info, and new Picture Styles buttons now sit below the LCD rather than to the side, and the buttons are substantially smaller than before. They also sit flatter and more flush with the body, making them harder to feel and press. Along the same lines, the Metering/WB, AF/Drive, ISO/Flash compensation, and LCD backlight buttons, which seem to rise slightly higher than previously, feel identical and impossible to differentiate from one another.
On the upside, the 40D has a bigger, more tactile mode dial, with three slots for User settings (the 30D had none). Although I find these invaluable, there's one behavior that really annoys me: if the camera goes to sleep, it resets any setting overrides you've made while in one of the user modes.
Canon also redesigned the grip, adding a curved indentation just below the ledge with the shutter button, where your middle finger falls. It's a subtle but nice ergonomic enhancement that makes the grip feel just a little more solid. Canon also redesigned the menu system, which is now far easier to read and navigate. (Click through a slide show discussion of the body design and menus.)
A few new features have also popped up with the 40D. Most notably, it offers a Live View mode, with a better, more flexible implementation than that of the 1D Mark III--or most others, for that matter. Unlike its big brother, you can autofocus in Live View; when you press the AF-ON button, it flips the mirror down, focuses, then flips the mirror back up so the focus-corrected view appears on the screen. On the downside, it focuses only using the center AF area. And regardless of focus mechanism, it uses only evaluative metering.
As with a point-and-shoot camera, you can pull up a magnified view to help with manual focusing. In addition, three so-called "silent shooting" options allow you to control the shutter curtain reset to delay the noise and minimize vibration. Though hardly "silent," the 40D does have one of the quieter Live View modes I've encountered. You can also set the metering timer, how long the camera holds and displays the metering information after you release the shutter button, anywhere from 4 seconds to 30 minutes. I'd love this feature to be available for general shooting rather than limit it to Live View. All that said, Live View shooting continues to be a bit of a niche application for dSLRs; generally, it's suitable only if your subject matter allows for a tripod and optimally a connected PC for remote control. Keep in mind that the sensor can get warm in this mode, and as Canon warns, increased heat will result in increased image noise.
For more meat-and-potatoes changes, the 40D now supports Auto ISO in all modes beyond full Auto, which comes in handy every now and then. The new viewfinder system supports interchangeable focusing screens and, for all you four-eyed photogs, offers a relatively high 22mm eyepoint and slightly greater magnification than that of the 30D, 0.95 vs. 0.90. Canon also added an sRaw format, which shoots small, 2.5-megapixel raw images. I don't see the utility of this feature, but it's easy enough to ignore. Not so easy to ignore is the increased spot size for the spot meter, up to 3.8 percent of the viewfinder from the 30D's 3.5 percent. (Here's why that's bad.)
Other features--and the 40D has plenty--remain pretty much unchanged. These include three 9-point autofocus modes: Single-shot, AI Servo tracking autofocus, and AI Focus, which switches between Single and AI Servo if it detects that the subject has moved. Unfortunately, the AI Focus can't tell the difference between subject movement and the photographer doing a focus-and-recompose, so you're usually better off picking Single or Servo and sticking with it. Four metering modes--evaluative, partial metering (approximately 9 percent of the viewfinder), the aforementioned 3.8 percent spot, and center-weighted average metering--provide reasonable flexibility. It's got a full slate of white-balance settings, including bracketing and custom corrections along the blue, amber, magenta and green axes; color temperature; and manual. A few scene program modes--portrait, landscape, macro, sports, and night portrait--augment the semimanual program, aperture- and shutter-priority, automatic depth-of-field AE, and manual exposure modes. Relevant maximums include a top shutter speed of 1/8,000 second and top flash sync speed of 1/250 second.
Though the 40D isn't missing any feature in particular--though I could make a case for mechanical image stabilization--one feature I'd really like to see trickle down from the 1D series, and which I think makes a lot of sense in a camera of this class, is the ability to define acceptable ranges for aperture, shutter speed, and ISO sensitivity when shooting in one of the exposure-priority modes.
As for performance, the 40D is reasonably speedy for its class, and roughly 20 percent faster overall than the 30D. But it still can't keep up with the faster D80. From a cold start to first shot takes only 0.3 second, and under optimal conditions it can focus and shoot in only 0.4 second. A healthy buffer and fast card writes allows the 40D to maintain that pace from shot to shot for both JPEG and raw. Flash recycle time adds slightly less than 0.2 second to that. The 40D has slow- and high-speed burst modes which test out at 3.1 frames per second (fps) and 6.3fps, respectively; the slower mode is for preventing buffer lockups when using a slow CF card. I also found the slower mode a useful speed option when shooting with the Speedlite 580EX flash with sluggishly recycling alkaline batteries. Note that in the case of the 40D a "slow" CF card does not mean "anything slower than UDMA." It doesn't support UDMA, and seems to have sufficient buffer to maintain maximum throughput even with a last-generation SanDisk Extreme III (133x) card.
However, the camera does hit one sour performance note: leisurely low-contrast focusing, which ratchets up low-light lag to 1.2 seconds. This is despite Canon's claim of a 30 percent increase in AF calculation speed. Though not uncommon for a dSLR, we really expect better, especially for this price class. Canon rates the battery, the same 1,390mAH BP-511A used by the 30D, at 1,100 shots (sans flash). Though this is reasonably long, Canon lags behind many of the other manufacturers for providing intelligent power display and estimates of power remaining. The large, bright LCD is easy to view, but like even the best camera LCDs, it renders relatively poor representations of color and exposure.
Photos show excellent dynamic range, with no visible clipping in the highlights or shadows (of correct exposures). Though they definitely fall within an acceptable range, automatic white balance under artificial lights tends to be a bit warm, and even manual white-balance shots measure a tad green-heavy. Automatically balanced sunlit shots render a bit cool. With the exception of certain types of spot-metering cases that I discuss in the slide show, all of the metering schemes delivered excellent, balanced exposures. The 40D's ISO sensitivity caps out at ISO 3,200 and remains visually unobtrusive as high as ISO 800. Beyond that, you can spot noise, but it doesn't jump out of the shadows and knock you over the head.
For Canon devotees, the EOS 40D is a great camera and remains an excellent choice compared with most of the dSLRs in and around its price class--with one exception. Despite its many attractions, the Canon EOS 40D doesn't clearly outshine its closest competitor, the Nikon D90. Though the 40D has the obvious advantage for action shooting--almost double the burst rate and a higher top shutter speed--the D90 generally feels a bit faster and more responsive for single-shot photography, and offers video capture (though flawed) and a higher resolution. I think the 40D ultimately does deliver better photo quality, but some people might find the differences more subtle. And, of course, the more expensive Canon EOS 50D remains a wild card until we've tested it. So for the moment, the 40D gets a hearty, if not wholly unqualified, endorsement.
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
| Time to first shot | Raw shot-to-shot time | Shutter lag (dim light) | Shutter lag (typical) |
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
User reviews
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A Major upgrade from the earlier Canon xxD Series
by mkaplan514 on October 14, 2007
Pros: Excellent IQ, Fast FPS, Viewfinder, LCD, too many to mention
Cons: There really are none.
Summary: For those familiar with the xxD series of Canon DSLR cameras, Canon made a wide range of improvements on the 40D to bring this camera up to a new level. ...
Summary: For those familiar with the xxD series of Canon DSLR cameras, Canon made a wide range of improvements on the 40D to bring this camera up to a new level. Everything from Image IQ (Image Quality), Canon's Famous Hi ISO low noise, speed and acuracy. They even madeimprovements in areas that some thought were a little weak in their prevois 10D/20D/30D cameras like better AF, ISO in the viewfinder, 3" LCD etc.
This is a list of new features and upgrades from the 20D-30D and 30D-40D differences.For those that are considering an upgrade from the previous xxD series cameras, it shows what the differences are and each person can judge for themselves what is or is not important to them and whether it pays to upgrade. I personally upgraded from the 20D.
1. Revised body and control layout.
2. 10 MP CMOS sensor.
3. EOS Integrated Cleaning System.
4. DIGIC III Image Processor.
5. 14-bit ADC.
6. 5FPS increase to 6.5 FPS shooting speed.
7. Larger buffer.
8. Larger, brighter viewfinder.
9. Three interchangeable focusing screens.
10.ISO display in viewfinder with B/W icon.
11.Faster and quieter powered mirror mechanism.
12.Nine-point AF sensor with cross sensitivity.
13.AF-ON button.
14.24 custom functions in four groups.
15.WFT-E3/E3A wireless transmitter / grip.
16.New grip (compatible w.previous grip).
17.Weatherproof compartment doors.
18.Larger 3.0" LCD monitor.
19.Live View.
20.Shooting Information Display.
21.EOS-1D style menu system.
22.On-screen settings adjustments.
23.Auto ISO.
24.Three new camera user settings.
25.Trimming including tilt correction.
26.RAW with sRAW.
27.Optional High ISO Noise Reduction.
28.Does not power down if card door opened.
29.External USB media support.
30.Improved white balance.
31.Increased playback modes.
32.Optional highlight alert on playback.
33.Optional AF point display on playback.
34.In-camera flash configuration w/580EXII.
35.Increased menu languages.
36.Increase metering range 0-20EV instead of 1-20.
37.Increase in Kelvin WB range 2500 down from 2800.
38.Mirror Lock Up for multiple exposures.
Whereas 20D to 30D had...
01. Metering modes added Spot (3.5% at center).
02. ISO steps 0.3 EV steps 1.0 EV steps
03. Added Image "Picture Style"
04. Custom image parameters - greater range +-4 rather than +-2
05. LCD 2.5" 230,000 pixels vs 1.8" 118,000 pixels LCD
06. Histogram added RGB (minor)
07. Continuous speed added 3 frames per second choice
08. Continuous buffer Up to 30 JPEG/11 RAW vs Up to 23 JPEG/6 RAW
09. Playback file size display Yes, MB vs No
10. Added Playback jump range of 100 images & By date 10 images
11. Record review magnify Optional vs N/A
12. Custom functions 19 C.Fn. 53 settings vs 18 C.Fn.50 settings
Really not offering much which is why so many people did not upgrade from 20D-30D.
Go to your local store and tryout the 40D. You won't be sorry9 out of 10 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Improvement over the 20D (finally)
by jka1946 on September 27, 2007
Pros: Just what I was waiting for!
Cons: None that affect my type of shooting.
Summary: I've had an EOS 20D for sometime. When the 30D came out, I took a look at it. I was disappointed because the improvements weren't much over the ...
Summary: I've had an EOS 20D for sometime. When the 30D came out, I took a look at it. I was disappointed because the improvements weren't much over the 20D. I think Canon wasted their time with the introduction of the 30D.
When the 40D came out, it was what I was hoping for. I have an EOS XTi, but it's just to compact for my grip. I will keep the XTi as a back-up, but will probably put my 20D on eBay.
The things that sold me on the 40D was the size, compatibility with all my Canon EOS equipment, the 3" screen, higher megapixel rating, and the sensor cleaning system. I'm using the battery grip that I had on my 20D, so I didn't have to fork over another 200 bucks for a new one like I did when upgrading from a Digital Rebel to a Rebel XTi.5 out of 6 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Lori got it wrong - great camera !!
by Justaddwata on February 13, 2008
Pros: Processing speed, power, balanced weight
Cons: poor lens options as kit,
Summary: Sorry Lori - You refer to the lens included in your review as the 28-135 lens - fact is that your handling an "L" series lens (probably the 17-40mm) which ...
Summary: Sorry Lori - You refer to the lens included in your review as the 28-135 lens - fact is that your handling an "L" series lens (probably the 17-40mm) which is a great choice but unfortunately not included.
Had my 40D for a month and have around 2000 pics through her. I shoot action shots and the fast shooting rate is appreciated. Also the ability to scroll through dozens of pics with the spin of the wheel is a real treat (compared to some of the past cameras I have had where it takes a second or two per image).
Battery life is very good - even with included flash.
As my first DSLR I was thrown off by the 1.6X magnification factor. I went with the 28-135 which gives you a lens that is more like 55-210mm which was of little value to me. I added the 17-40mm "L" along with the 35-350 "L" which both flaunt the capabilities of the image quality more than the stock lens.
Colors are superb, quality of image is impressive. Zero complaints about the quality of the camera, design, functionality, or performance.
While this camera is rated for 100 000 images I can see that number coming and going in no time.
Do yourself a favor and spend some money and get a quality card. I went with 16gb and can fill that in a few hours of action shooting.3 out of 3 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Beautiful pictures, Good ergo, great User Interface, great features - love this cam
by msvanjara on December 28, 2007
Pros: Easy to hold, fast focus, good exposure, dust delete, weather seal, And great pictures
Cons: No cover for hotshoe, LCD resolution 230K only.
Summary: This is a beautiful camera. I love using it. The camera feels right in my hands. The buttons, and user interface is great. I can access all features very easily. ...
Summary: This is a beautiful camera. I love using it. The camera feels right in my hands. The buttons, and user interface is great. I can access all features very easily. Love the joystick and jump buttons.
It takes good pictures. I love the colours, and my pictures turns out well exposed in all kinds of lighting and situation. White balance is great.
With weather seals, with most of my lenses, it offers reasonable protection against dust and elements.
My grievance with DSLR was dust specs ruining my beautiful sky pictures. So the dust delete and sensor clean helps I guess. It is still new so dont really know how effective the sensor clean function will be.
The negatives i can see are - the cam was made weather seal and then Canon does not provide a cap for the hotshoe. This defeat the purpose of putting weather seals in other areas and leaving hotshoe with electrical contact open. Imagine water and electrical contacts
Coming from Nikon camp earlier, the D80 came with a good hotshoe cap.
The other thing i guess i feel a bit pain is the LCD resolution. Nothing wrong with 230K as it displays images perfect on the 3inch screen. Just that everyone else goes very high res and once you see your friends high res LCD, you feel the pain.
All said and done - I really enjoy this cam. It is really a great cam and has already made me happy with some great pictures.
BTW - the reviewer says it is slow as compared to D80. Having used both, I will say no comparison
Different class altogether. I dont think 40D is slow. It focuses super
maybe start up time is slightly slow, but then there is a the fast focus and shutter which in my opinion got me emergency pics when i wanted 
3 out of 3 users found this user opinion helpful.
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High end Pro-sumer DSLR
by jwilli4834 on April 13, 2008
Pros: Everything you would expect from Canon
Cons: Size / Weight
Summary: I have owned this camera for a couple of months, and I think that the "testers" at cnet need their heads examined. The low light ability of this camera is ...
Summary: I have owned this camera for a couple of months, and I think that the "testers" at cnet need their heads examined. The low light ability of this camera is phenomenal. I would ask the national Canon rep to stop by your offices with a different camera for a demonstration of it's abilities. You must be kidding! My preference is to never use a flash unless I absolutely have to. I have been able to capture some very stunning images indoors and out under low light conditions. My only wish is that I could stick it in my pocket and carry it all of the time, because I would.....
2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Amazing camera
by daniella3d on February 7, 2008
Pros: AF, frame buffer, burst, LiveView, excellent image quality
Cons: The burst slow down with older lenses like the 50mm F1.8 In AI servo
Summary: I do birds and wildlife and a lot and needed a camera that could have the AF performance very robust in AI servo and the 40D delivers. It AF well ...
Summary: I do birds and wildlife and a lot and needed a camera that could have the AF performance very robust in AI servo and the 40D delivers. It AF well with a non reporting teleconverter like the Tamron 1.4x and my 400mm F5.6 L.
So far I don't seen any negative except one, which would be that the burst rate slow down to about 4 or 5fps when using it with AI servo and a lens like 50mm F1.8. So the burst rate in AI servo is directly dependant on the AF speed of the lens.
Despite this, I gave it a 10 because it's not really the camera fault if a lens is slow to AF. I rather have the burst slow down a bit if the lens can't keep up than having a lot of frames out of focus.
I was using the 20D before and this one is a major step above the 20D in term of speed and AF precision.2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Best prosumer camera on the market
by alexakay on November 21, 2007
Pros: Image Quality, Live View, Dust prevention, Speed
Cons: LCD preview not accurate
Summary: Overall this camera is great in every respect. All the new features in 40D makes it a worthwhile upgrade from xxD series. Speed, custom functions, Live view, Dust prevention, constuction ...
Summary: Overall this camera is great in every respect. All the new features in 40D makes it a worthwhile upgrade from xxD series. Speed, custom functions, Live view, Dust prevention, constuction are build quality are great. Larger LCD is great but I wish the camera displayed a high resolution of the picture when magnified to check the focus. At full magnification pictures look fuzzy. I hope Canon fixes this in the upcoming firmware releases.
Updated
I upgraded from a 30D and I love the Live View and Auto Dust clean features. 10Mp is adequate for most situtions except highly professional work. Camera feels solid and very comfortable to hold. Rotating dial is very effective. Picture quality is outstanding. However I have one gripe which is probably shared among all 40D owners. The preview on the LCD is blurry when magnified. The LCD itself is capable of showing a much better image but Canon insists on using low resolution jpeg thumbnails for preview. This could be easily fixed in Firmware but so far Canon has not done it. Regretfully in this respect Nikon outshines Canon.2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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An Amazing Piece of Equipment
by xxIchiKokoxx on July 27, 2008
Pros: Large Grip, Large LCD, Clear View Finder, Manageable Noise, Fast Responsive Auto Focus, 6 FPS
Cons: LCD Is Mediocre, Top LCD Buttons Are a Bit too far to reach
Summary: First Impressions
I love this camera so much, its so much fun an easy to use. Once you get used to the controls (or if you've used previous models) ...Summary: First Impressions
I love this camera so much, its so much fun an easy to use. Once you get used to the controls (or if you've used previous models) its really easy to use. The large grip makes it easy to hold and feels better in the hands, especially when I am use heavy lenses like the 70-200mm f/2.8 it feels like it balances the weight very well.
Imagine Quality-
Its pretty sharp and nice color saturation, though I would like to see my colors more punchy without having to adjust my settings in Standard. The noise on this camera is kept very well in check with very little noise up to 1000 ISO. And even usable pictures at 3200ISO (with a little noise reduction software).
Body -
It feels really comfortable and does not feel hard to hold. Ergonomics and cosmetics on this body are wonderful, sleek black body and feels very sturdy. Only nitpick i can think of is the placement of the buttons on the top LCD. The last button is just a tad to far for my index finger to reach without loosening my grip on the camera with my right hand.
Features -
6FPS, wow. It captures things I could never capture with my XTi in burst mode. Its amazing how it sounds, I love it. Anyways besides the fast shutter speed, another feature it has is the Live View. I personally have only used it twice? Its not very practical for me but if your doing macro you can zoom in on any part of the picture and finely tune the focus with your manuel focus.
Conclusion -
Its an amazing piece of equipment I know that I will use a lot in the years to come!1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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QUALITY FEEL
by rugercat on February 1, 2008
Pros: IMAGES TO MY LIKING,COMPARED TO D80
Cons: LCD SCREEN DOES'NT REP. IMAGE WELL
Summary: The Canon 40D has a great quality feel,produces an image I like compared to the Nikon D80,has a softness to the image that's constant and produces a ...
Summary: The Canon 40D has a great quality feel,produces an image I like compared to the Nikon D80,has a softness to the image that's constant and produces a constant background also.Where the D80 was a little more sharper on the subject,but did'nt seem the same,exact sharpness all over the focus area.My eyes enjoy that overall solid softness to the 40D.I'm eager to use with L series Lense's.I have kit 28-135 and purchased a seperate EF 70-300mm 1:4-5:6IS USM lense.
I find the 28-135 lense supplied with 40D o be a great,overall lense.The IS works great.The $650.00 70-300 is similar but does require more steadiness even with the 2 stage IS feature.
I can't rely totally on the LCD screen for any slight defects to images,I wish it had a better LCD screen resolution (or whatever it would be) to display images to near perfect representation of image,if so it would rate a close 10 for me!1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Excellent Semi-Pro Camera
by Mtech on November 23, 2007
Pros: Great images with low noise, fast and accurate AF, well built
Cons: None at this time
Summary: I wanted to upgrade from my Canon Rebel XT which is a very good beginner dSLR. But I wanted something that is faster with great images even at high ISO. ...
Summary: I wanted to upgrade from my Canon Rebel XT which is a very good beginner dSLR. But I wanted something that is faster with great images even at high ISO.
This camera feels like a dSLR while the Rebel XT seemed a little too small and very plastiky. The AF is very good even at low light and much faster than the Rebel XT. Also I can now take images at 1/3 ISO stops. The images are also less grainy / noisy even at 1250 / 1600 ISO. This camera also has some great features found in the 1D Mark III including 3" Liveview LCD, Auto Sensor Cleaning. Finally, this camera is extremely responsive from start up to taking a shot - max 6.5 fps is much faster than the Rebel XT.
I also find that the images are either properly exposed / maybe sometimes a little over-exposed. But my Rebel XT seemed to under-expose most images. The images from the 40D are sharp with great colours and detail.
I highly recommend this semi-pro camera. Great value for the price.1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
Specifications
- Manufacturer: Canon USA
- Part number: 1901B004
- Description: Welcome to the next generation of digital SLR photography - the Canon EOS 40D. The EOS 40D combines Canon's tremendous know-how in both the digital and photographic worlds, creating a camera that not only does everything one would expect of a traditional digital SLR, but one that incorporates staggering leaps forward in technological innovation. With new features like Canon's EOS Integrated Cleaning System, Live View Function, a more powerful DIGIC III Image Processor, plus a 10.1-megapixel CMOS sensor, a 3.0-inch LCD monitor and more, the EOS 40D elevates digital photography to new heights, enhancing the shooting experience, and delivering images one could only expect from a Canon.
General
- Product Type Digital camera - SLR with Live View mode
- Width 5.7 in
- Depth 2.9 in
- Height 4.3 in
- Weight 1.5 lbs
- Body Material Magnesium alloy
Main Features
- Resolution 10.1 megapixels
- Color Support Color
- Optical Sensor Type CMOS
- Total Pixels 10,100,000 pixels
- Effective Sensor Resolution 10,500,000 pixels
- Field of View Crop Factor 1.6
- Sensor Dust Reduction Yes
- Sensor Features EOS Integrated Cleaning System
- Light Sensitivity ISO 3200, ISO 100-1600
- Max Shutter Speed 1/8000 sec
- Min Shutter Speed 30 sec
- X-sync Speed 1/250 sec
- Exposure Metering Spot, Evaluative, Partial (9%), Center-weighted
- Exposure Modes Bulb, Manual, Program, Automatic, Depth-of-field, Shutter-priority, Aperture-priority, E-TTL II program flash
- Exposure Range EV -0.5-18 ( ISO 100 )
- Exposure Compensation ±3 EV range, in 1/2 or 1/3 EV steps
- Exposure Metering Zones 35
- White Balance Custom, Presets, Automatic
- White Balance Presets Flash, Shade, Cloudy, Daylight, Fluorescent, Tungsten light, 2500K - 10000K (100K steps)
- White Balance Bracketing Yes
- Status LCD Display Illumination Yes
- Status LCD Display Information Program, Aperture, Drive mode, Film speed, Flash mode, Focus area, Frame counter, Metering mode, Photo quality, Shutter speed, Autofocus mode, Self-timer mode, Photos remaining, Battery condition, Manual focus mode, Red-eye reduction, Exposure compensation, White balance indicators
- Still Image Format RAW, JPEG, RAW + JPEG
- Continuous Shooting Speed 6.5 frames per second
- Remote Control Optional
- TV Tuner None
Memory / Storage
- Flash Memory None
- Supported Flash Memory Microdrive, CompactFlash
- Floppy Drive None
- Image Storage RAW, JPEG 3888 x 2592 - 3.5 MB, JPEG 2816 x 1880 - 2.1 MB, JPEG 1936 x 1288 - 1.2 MB, RAW 3888 x 2592 - 12.4 MB, RAW 1936 x 1288 - 7.1 MB
Camera Flash
- Camera Flash Pop-up flash
- Guide Number (m / ISO 100) 13
- Flash Modes E-TTL, Auto mode
- Red Eye Reduction Yes
- Features AF illuminator, Flash +/- compensation
Lens System
- Auto Focus TTL phase detection
- Auto Focus Points (Zones) 9
- Lens System Mounting Canon EF
Additional Features
- Self Timer Yes
- Self Timer Delay 2 sec, 10 sec
- Flash Terminal Hot shoe, PC terminal
- Additional Features AE lock, AF lock, Wi-Fi ready, DPOF support, Direct print, Auto power save, Histogram display, LCD live view mode, PictBridge support, USB 2.0 compatibility, Digital image rotation, RGB primary color filter, Display brightness control, Depth-of-field preview button
Viewfinder
- Viewfinder Type Optical - Fixed eye-level pentaprism
- Viewfinder Color Support Color
- Field Coverage 95%
- Magnification 0.95x
- Dioptric Correction Range -3 to +1
- Viewfinder Frames Autofocus frame
- LCD Display Information AE lock, Aperture, AF-in-focus, Shutter speed, Red-eye reduction, Exposure compensation, Flash charge completion
Display
- Type LCD display - TFT active matrix - 3 in - Color
- Display Form Factor Built-in
- Display Format 230,000 pixels
Digital Player (Recorder)
- Type None
Microphone
- Type None
Connections
- Connector Type 1 x Composite video output, 1 x Flash terminal, 1 x Remote control, 1 x USB
- Expansion Slot(s) 1 x CompactFlash Card - Type I/II
Software
- Software Drivers & Utilities
Miscellaneous
- Carrying Case None
- Microsoft Certifications Certified for Windows Vista
- Included Accessories Body cap, Neck strap
- Cables Included 1 x Video cable, 1 x USB cable
Power
- Power Device Battery charger - External
Battery
- Supported Battery Canon BP-511A
- Supported Battery 1 x Li-ion rechargeable battery - 1390 mAh ( Included )
Environmental Parameters
- Min Operating Temperature 32 °F
- Max Operating Temperature 104 °F
CNET Labs' Benchmarks
- Labs information All values are expressed in seconds. Please visit our labs information page for information on how digital cameras are tested.
- CNET Labs Flash shot to shot time 0.6
- CNET Labs Raw shot to shot time 0.4
- CNET Labs Shot to shot time typical 0.4
- CNET Labs Shutter lag bright 0.4
- CNET Labs Shutter lag dim 1.2
- CNET Labs Typical burst speed 3.1
- CNET Labs Wake up time 0.3
Product series
-

Canon EOS 40D (w/ 28mm-135mm lens)
Manufacturer: Canon USA
Specs: SLR, 10.1 megapixels, 3 in LCD display
-

Manufacturer: Canon USA
Specs: SLR, 10.1 megapixels, 3 in LCD display
-

Canon EOS 40D (with 17-85mm lens)
Manufacturer: Canon USA
Specs: SLR, 10.1 megapixels, 5 x, 3 in LCD display
Accessories
- EF 70-200 mm f/2.8L IS USM Telephoto Zoom Lens (30233013)1693.90 - 1849.99
- Canon EF 70-300mm f/4-5.6 IS USM lens (31520241)479.95 - 649.99
- Canon EF 70-200mm f4 IS USM L (32145498)1119.90 - 1468.70
- Canon 64 MB CompactFlash Card (7345383)6.25
- Sandisk CompactFlash 512MB (30828339)19.00 - 19.95
- SanDisk Extreme IV CompactFlash Card (8GB) (32143124)81.25
Manufacturer info
- Canon USA
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse Canon USA products on Shopper.com
-
- Website: http://estore.usa.canon.com/
- Address:
One Canon Plaza, Lake Success, NY 11042 - Phone: 516-328-5000
- Email: mediacontact@cusa.canon.com









