Sony Alpha DSLR-A700
Manufacturer: Sony Part number: DSLR-A700
- More product information:
- Editors' review
- User reviews
- Specifications
- Product series
- Accessories
- Manufacturer info
- Bottom Line:
- A top-of-the-line amateur digital SLR camera, the Sony Alpha DSLR-A700 will delight Konica Minolta diehards and makes a great choice if you don't already have a stake in other lens systems.
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CNET editors' review
Sony Alpha DSLR-A700 price range: $760.00 - $899.99
- Reviewed by: Lori Grunin
- Reviewed on: 10/10/2007
- Updated on:10/02/2008
- Released on: 09/27/2007
The good: Exceptionally streamlined, comfortable shooting design; broad, functional feature set, including sensor-shift image stabilizer; excellent photo quality; fast burst-shooting performance.
The bad: A few design quirks.
The bottom line: A top-of-the-line amateur digital SLR camera, the Sony Alpha DSLR-A700 will delight Konica Minolta diehards and makes a great choice if you don't already have a stake in other lens systems.
Editors' note: The competitive landscape for this camera has changed since our review and we've updated the text and ratings to reflect that. The design rating goes from a 9 to an 8--while still a very nicely designed model, other cameras have adopted some of its conveniences. Features drops from a 9 to an 8, since its still notable set of capabilities have popped up in more competitors. While it delivers solid performance, testing of subsequent models show it to be slower than the rest of its class in several situations, so we've dropped its performance rating to a 7. Text changes include comparisons to newer models.
I know Sony's older, entry-level Alpha DSLR-A100 has its share of fans, but I never got a chance to shoot with it, which made the 12-megapixel Alpha DSLR-A700 my introduction to Sony's take on dSLRs. And I soon found that the unprepossessing, very un-Sony-like design camouflages a sophisticated dSLR that's enjoyable to shoot and can hold its own quite well against models from veteran camera manufacturers such as Canon and Nikon. True, much of the DNA for Sony's dSLRs comes from the company's acquisition of deceased long-time player Konica Minolta, but simply relying on good genes never gets you very far in a fickle consumer electronics market.
Sony offers several bundles for the A700: body only; a kit with an f/3.5-to-f/5.6, 16mm-to-105mm lens slated to ship late in 2007; a kit with an f/3.5-to-f/4.6, 18mm-to-70mm lens; a kit with an f/3.5-to-f/5.6, 18mm-to-200mm lens; and a dual-lens kit with the aforementioned 18mm-to-70mm lens and a f/3.5-to-f/6.3, 75mm-to-300mm lens. If you opt for a kit, the dual-lens package looks like the best value; the lenses don't add much to the cost, and together they cover a good general-purpose range. However, if you're considering buying a body and lens separately, I think it's worth the extra money for one of the Zeiss T* coated lenses. They feel more substantial and--as you'd expect for pricier models--are faster, sharper lenses. Personally, I'm fond of the SAL-1680 f/3.5-to-f/4.5, 16mm-to-80mm (equivalent 35mm focal range is 24mm to 120mm) as a general-use lens. As of this writing, the 16mm-to-105mm lens wasn't available, but the focal range it covers (35mm equivalent of 24mm to 157.5mm) sounds promising as a kit staple. And though it won't be available until next spring, Sony also announced an f/4.5-to-f/5.6, 70mm-to-300 mm (105mm-to-450mm-equivalent) lens that incorporates a supersonic motor (for quieter, smoother operation) in its autofocus system. As you'd expect, the A700 will also accept legacy Minolta AF mount lenses--you can find a surprisingly complete list of them in Dyxum.com's Minolta Sony Alpha lens database.
The body itself is dust- and moisture-resistant, with an aluminum chassis and a magnesium outer shell. Weighing 1.75 pounds, the A700 feels solid and well made. Thanks to a deep indent on the grip beneath the ledge holding the shutter and a dial--much like the design of the Canon EOS 40D--the A700 also feels exceptionally comfortable and stable to hold. Like its Konica Minolta ancestors, the A700 implements a proprietary hot shoe. Though it doesn't really matter for flash units, which are proprietary as well, the odd connector may limit your choice of accessories that use the hot shoe as a dumb mount. Not a critical problem, but one to be aware of.
Operating the A700 is pretty straightforward. Since it lacks a monochrome display on the top, you configure settings via a combination of direct-access buttons and the LCD. A function button pulls up the Quick Nav interactive information display of all your current settings, which you navigate via a big, comfortable joystick. Only focus modes (single-shot, continuous, single/continuous autoselection, and manual) and the three metering modes (spot, evaluative, and center-weighted) have their own selection switches. As with all dSLRs of this class, you control shutter speed, aperture, exposure compensation, and program shift with dials. (For more on the body design, check out this slide show.)
One of the few issues I have with the A700's operation is the way it handles switching among the three user-definable custom presets. Rather than allocating three separate slots on the mode dial as on the 40D, there's a single Memory Recall slot that brings up a selection screen when you rotate the dial to MR. Once you make your selection, however, the screen disappears until the next time you rotate the dial. So if you shoot for a while using MR1, for example, you must then rotate the dial away and back to MR in order to select a different preset. How much this bothers you will depend upon how heavily you depend on the custom settings; I use them increasingly as time goes on, which inflates my annoyance a bit. On the other hand, and more importantly, the A700 doesn't seem to lose overrides when it goes to sleep the way the 40D does.
Sony also makes the right calls on the A700's feature set. It lacks Live View shooting; though Live View can be useful on occasion, I never miss it when it's not there.
Instead, Sony includes a solid set of really practical features, including SteadyShot sensor-shift image stabilization, a built-in wireless flash transmitter and dual memory-card slots (although one is for Memory Stick Duo Pro rather than an SD or second CF card). It also provides Eye-Start AF--when the sensor below the viewfinder detects an object (ostensibly your eye), it initiates AF--a holdover from the A100. This model augments it with a grip sensor to minimize false starts. I'm not a fan of Eye-Start AF, since I find it disconcerting as well as battery draining, but I can see how some would find it useful. You can turn it all off if you want, as I do.
In some cases, the A700 offers features and options not usually found in a camera of this class. For instance, you can choose how long the AF area displays, as well as set both minimum and maximum values (not just maximum) for the Auto ISO range. As I've said elsewhere, I'd love the ability to set similar boundaries for aperture and shutter speed as well. It also has extremely nice power handling; like all Sony InfoLithium systems, it reports percentage of battery life remaining. With the battery grip attached and loaded with two batteries, the camera reports for both batteries. Like the 40D, the A700 supports interchangeable focusing screens.
And because it's from Sony, the A700 naturally has a TV tie-in. You can display photos on an HDTV via HDMI, thanks to a mini-HDMI connector on the camera, though Sony doesn't bundle a cable--and they're still pretty pricey. The camera automatically downconverts images for optimal presentation. If you happen to have a recent-vintage BRAVIA TV, the latter can automatically switch into a photo-optimized colorspace, called PhotoTV mode, when connected to the A700 (and likely with forthcoming Sony snapshot cameras, as well). I viewed my photos on a Sony KDL-46XBR4 in standard and PhotoTV modes, and it does make a difference. Not a reason to buy either the camera or the TV, but certainly a nice perk if you do.
Like the 40D, Sony supplies a compressed raw format, cRaw, designed for faster raw-format burst shooting, in addition to its various combinations of standard raw and JPEG files. Unlike Canon's spatially compressed--that is, lower resolution--sRaw, however, Sony's cRaw uses lossless compression to shrink file size from about 18MB to 12MB. On one hand, cRaw does let you shoot about 7 more frames in a burst (more, but not faster).
In-camera processing algorithms also get a boost. Sony's Dynamic Range Optimizer, which applies image adjustment curves to expand the tonal range, now offers an advanced mode that analyzes 1,200 segments in the frame. In addition, there's a DRO bracketing drive mode. In a similar vein, the A700 ships with seven Creative Styles, which are named presets of combinations of contrast, saturation, sharpness and brightness: Standard, Vivid, Neutral, AdobeRGB, Portrait, Landscape, and Black and White. Of those, the last three support user adjustments and add a Zone setting option, which can automatically adjust the tonal range for high-key (bright) or low-key (shadowy) scenes. For a complete list of these and the camera's more mundane features and operation, check out this PDF version of the user manual.
By the numbers, the A700 delivers very good--though not outstanding--performance for its class. (CNET Labs ran the tests using the 18mm-to-70mm kit lens.) It can shoot 0.5 second after power up, the same amount of time it takes to focus and shoot a typical well-lit scene, and two consecutive nonburst shots edges up to 0.6 second. These results put it about 0.1 second behind the 40D overall for single shots, though in practice I didn't feel much of a difference. The responsive feel may be attributable to the overhauled focusing system, which uses 11 area AF sensors, 2 each horizontal and vertical line sensors in the center plus an f/2.8 sensor to improve focus speed when shooting with a wide-aperture lens.
However, like many of its competitors, under dim, low-contrast conditions, the A700's focus slows, bumping the lag to 1.2 seconds; though common, I still think that's still too long for cameras at this price. Though it can't match the 40D's 6.3 frame-per-second (fps) burst-shooting rate, the A700's 4.8fps acquits itself quite nicely, especially since I think the focus matches its speed better than the 40D's does at maximum. (Sony's rating of 5fps assumes use of a UDMA-capable CF card; we obtained 4.8fps with a SanDisk Extreme IV, which is non-UDMA.) In field tests, I was quite happy with the A700's continuous-shooting performance.
As for nonquantifiable performance measures, Sony says it's enhanced the SteadyShot stabilization system--not the optical version, but the sensor-shift mechanism inherited from Konica Minolta--and claims it can buy you as many as four stops. It has a new gyro, with claimed improved compensation for high-frequency motion, such as overcaffeinated hands. Mine qualify as a moderate case of the high-frequency jitters; in bright light it delivered on the four-stop promise and in low-ish light gained me about 2 2/3 stops, both using manual focus.
Like the Nikon D300, the A700 also sports a somewhat confusingly specced 921,600-dot/307,200-pixel LCD with an approximate 170-degree-rated viewing angle. It's quite a nice display, viewable in bright light, and surprisingly good for judging sharpness when you're zoomed into a photo at the camera's 13x maximum.
As for photo quality, the A700 fares quite well. Metering, exposure, contrast, and saturation look excellent under a variety of lighting conditions, and the photos exhibit a broad tonal range. Automatic white balance generally works well, though photos render a bit too warm under strong incandescent or fluorescent lights, and like many cameras, the A700's auto white balance doesn't deal well with mixed light sources such as shots taken under fluorescents near a window. Under daylight, balance is extremely good, however. Image sharpness depends upon the lens, and the 18mm-to-70mm kit lens we tested with proved decent, though not outstanding.
The A700 incorporates Sony's latest 12-megapixel CMOS chip. Unlike most other sensors, this new model performs its analog-to-digital conversion on-chip, rather than in the imaging pipeline, a practice which Sony claims delivers better control over image noise. Though I can't confirm or deny that this is a better technology, the A700's noise profile is quite good. It does an excellent job maintaining color and exposure consistency across all the ISO sensitivity settings, and photos are quite usable up to and including ISO 3,200. Beyond that, as with similar cameras in this class, color speckles and smeary details begin to crop up.
All in all, I'm very impressed by the Sony Alpha DSLR-A700 as an all-around midrange digital SLR. Though more expensive than the Canon EOS 40D, the built-in image stabilizer and higher resolution are worth the extra bucks, unless you really need the little extra oomph in continuous-shooting performance that the 40D delivers.
(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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She would have loved it if it were a Nikon...
by optika_hawaii on December 11, 2008
Pros: Everything about this camera is beyond excellent. It doesn't have any overkill B.S. that comes standard on Nikon and Canon. Sony cuts straight to quality and intuitive user-friendliness.
Cons: Doesn't have the gauche appeal of Nikon or Canon. You need to really love photography and stick to your guns.
Summary: If somebody had told her this was a Nikon with a Nikon label on it...her review would have been glowing, with an excellent rating. She would have gone on ...
Summary: If somebody had told her this was a Nikon with a Nikon label on it...her review would have been glowing, with an excellent rating. She would have gone on and on about how wonderful the new "Nikon" is and how all of its feature sets are so much simpler now...take my advice. I've owned full-frame "pro" cameras by both Nikon and Canon...and I'm sick of them both. I'll take Sony anytime. Easy to use, professional quality imaging and ergonomis galore. Intuitive? My God YES!!! The lenses you can use with this camera are great, and no other vertical grip can compare to this one and the one for the A900. Be the future of professional photography. I'm an ALPHA!!!
3 out of 3 users found this user opinion helpful.
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The best SLR Camera of any type I ever owned!!
by edwalker on October 29, 2007
Pros: Quick focus and shutter reaction, very good resolution below 1600 ISO, good resolution above 1600 ISO, all the frequently used controls are just a button push away, good weight and solid grip
Cons: I don't really have any
Summary: My father has the Alpha DSLR-A100 and this has easier access to frequently used controls. This is a very enjoyable camera to hold and shoot. You will never regret this ...
Summary: My father has the Alpha DSLR-A100 and this has easier access to frequently used controls. This is a very enjoyable camera to hold and shoot. You will never regret this purchase.
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Best of the Best for Wedding Jobs
by olomina2 on October 22, 2009
Pros: PC SINC ADAPTER, GREAT HIGHLIGHT RANGE,,FAST FOCUSING AND CAN USE ANY MAXXUM LENSES,GREAT PICTURE QUALITY BETWEEN 100 TO 640 ASA,MANUAL WHITE BALANCE, CAN BE USED COMPLETELLY MANUAL, 3 DIFFERENT MANUAL BALANCES CAN BE SAVED FOR THE EVENT
Cons: i WHICH IT HAD A FULL SCREEN HIGHLIGHT CLIPPING AND INSTEAD OF THE SONY HOT SHOE A REGULAR FLASH HOT SHOE.
Summary: I OWN 2 CANON CAMERAS, STILL I WILL NOT CHANGE MY SONY FOR MY WEDDING JOBS AS THE QUALITY BEATS THE ONE FROM THE CANON CAMERAS THAT I OWN WITH ...
Summary: I OWN 2 CANON CAMERAS, STILL I WILL NOT CHANGE MY SONY FOR MY WEDDING JOBS AS THE QUALITY BEATS THE ONE FROM THE CANON CAMERAS THAT I OWN WITH THE SAME AMOUNT OR MORE OF PIXELS.
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Control accessibility, ease of use, excellent images.
by hjarmitage on May 24, 2009
Pros: Excellent features and first class images. The controls are very easy to learn and all are easily accessed. Uses Minolta glass.
Cons: Vertical grip duplicates main camera controls making the grip cluttered. It's easy to use controls even holding vertical without grip. With grip it's too easy to hit controls accidently.
Summary: I already own a Maxxum D7 Minolta and lenses so Sony is a natural choice since they took over Minolta imaging. As with the D7 the controls are well thought ...
Summary: I already own a Maxxum D7 Minolta and lenses so Sony is a natural choice since they took over Minolta imaging. As with the D7 the controls are well thought out and easy to use. It's not a beginners camera but with a decent knowledge of photography it is very controllable and the settings make creative images a lot of fun.
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Excellent camera. Nothing amateur about this camera.
by dove-7 on April 21, 2009
Pros: The camera takes me back to the Maxxum 7 auto focus focusing in the dark years. Excellent quiet focus and high iso low noise level rivals Nikon D300 that to the firm V4. DRO is a blessing and excellent when it comes to highlights. Semi pro.
Cons: Nothing that I can think of, but there is no perfect camera. I'd like to see more glass coming from Sony.
Summary: The camera is an excellent camera that competes with Nikon and Canon Canon 50D and D300 in every area minus the live view and video. But I'm a photographer ...
Summary: The camera is an excellent camera that competes with Nikon and Canon Canon 50D and D300 in every area minus the live view and video. But I'm a photographer that shoot fashion and commercial, I don't need a video on my camera. Sony has made this camera and the A900 for the serious photographer and hobbyist. Don't be fooled by the Cnet review, this is not an amateur camera by a long shot. This a semi and pro. camera that should be taken very serious. Even my Minolta 7D isn't an amateur camera and that camera can't compete with this camera. The images are breath taking, navigation is user friendly, quiet auto focus, big difference from Minolta's loud focusing noise. I don't struggle shooting with this camera, the dynamic range is awesome on this camera. No more clipping highlights like on my 7D and some of the older dslr cameras. The firmware via V4 was the best thing that Sony added, after seeing the noise result at 800 and up, I feel confident in shooting at those high speed while not sacrificing quality.
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A fantastic camera that is fun to shoot and easy to use
by jmcoa on February 7, 2009
Pros: Built in anti shake. Environmental seals on controls. Excellent image quality (be sure you install the latest firmware which fixes all the earlier issues and complaints! Some new A700s come with the older firmware). Takes Minolta, Sony, & Zeiss glass
Cons: The flash shoe is proprietary but, thankfully, Sony flashes are really nice and other flash makers sell for this shoe. No screen preview but I have found that I don't use it anyway on bodies I have that do preview.
Summary: Adding to "Pros": the ergonomics is the best of any camera I have ever used. The vertical grip is absolutely the best design out there. Sony is the company that ...
Summary: Adding to "Pros": the ergonomics is the best of any camera I have ever used. The vertical grip is absolutely the best design out there. Sony is the company that has been making sensors for Nikon and other camera makers for years. They are also an important company in video and HD equipment for professionals. Many of the Minolta engineers came over to Sony. Minolta was a great innovator in SLRs and lens technology. The Minolta and Sony lenses available are extensive and equal in quality to Nikanon. Look for "G" and Zeiss lenses if you are a pro. But even some of the "D" lenses are equivalent and a few regular Sony lenses are superb. Like the 50 mm macro. This is simply a very nice camera.
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All you need (and more) for your semi-pro experience.
by danieldotcom on October 25, 2008
Pros: Non-plastic core, features, 12 Mpixels, Decent built-in flash, battery consumption.
Cons: No live screen (although you wouldn't need it for a camera like this), cannot automatically switch memory cards when one is full.
Summary: I wanted to update myself leaving my old Nikon D40 and, even while I was a little sckeptical about Sony, took the advise of a friend. I don't regret ...
Summary: I wanted to update myself leaving my old Nikon D40 and, even while I was a little sckeptical about Sony, took the advise of a friend. I don't regret any single penny I spent in this camera!
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This is a great DSLR
by smoors on March 10, 2008
Pros: Quick focus and shutter reaction, very good resolution below 1600 ISO, good resolution above 1600 ISO, all the frequently used controls are just a button push away, good weight and solid grip
Cons: May be a little pricey
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Great "amateur" camera
by egstudioco on February 26, 2008
Pros: Solid construction; weather seals; fast focus; lens options
Cons: Still fairly noisy at ISO 400 and above
Summary: I love my A700 and wouldn't trade it for any competitor's equivalent model, even though I've always wanted a Nikon camera. Controls are easy to navigate, and ...
Summary: I love my A700 and wouldn't trade it for any competitor's equivalent model, even though I've always wanted a Nikon camera. Controls are easy to navigate, and I love that it can sync studio lights (haven't had a chance to utilize that feature yet). My 3500i flash (BTW, the onboard flash produces better results than any other built-in I've ever seen), and 3 lenses from my Minolta 7xi film camera all work on the A700. Not having to shell out the cash to replace those items mitigates its $1,500 price tag. No space to go into great detail, but suffice it to say that you can take advantage of the A700's myriad of features, use it as a fully manual camera, or even a simple point-and-shoot -- all with great results.
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Simple and Fantastic Speed
by jmendell on November 13, 2007
Pros: Very Quick and Light Weight
Cons: Lens Mount - why cant the whole world use Nikon's F
Summary: Overall superb, I jumped ship leaving my Nikon F5 to the moth balls, first digital SLR, and so far I am truly impressed, I love my Leica point and shoot ...
Summary: Overall superb, I jumped ship leaving my Nikon F5 to the moth balls, first digital SLR, and so far I am truly impressed, I love my Leica point and shoot digitals, but I cannot get it to go fast enough to catch the great expressions my kids make, or enough contrast from the scenery - this camera though, handles it very well. I splurged for a few lenses, Sony 50mm and 75-300mm, as well as a Tamron 11-16 and feel I need at least one more to make it a solid kit ? 16-80mm from Zeiss/Sony. Although it is not touted as a professional camera, I would put it right up there in their class, for the weight to quality ratio ? it is the pack leader the Canon and Nikon are just too heavy for a digi cam ? the speed is with a 40x+ CF card and with 8gigs I can easily put a couple of thousand images on one card ? the battery though rated for 605 shots has lasted for me thus far delivering about 1100 on one charge ? the biggest negative I have it the lack of an f-mount converter for the Sony system , that would have been cool. It has only been here for two weeks, but I am confident enough at this point to write this review and add it to the stable.
Specifications
- Manufacturer: Sony
- Part number: DSLR-A700
- Description: High performance Digital Single Lens Reflex (D-SLR) camera - body only. Superlative HD picture quality from shooting to viewing. Ultra-responsive performance, ruggedly constructed and beautifully easy to use.
General
- Product Type Digital camera - SLR
- Width 5.6 in
- Depth 3.1 in
- Height 4.1 in
- Weight 1.5 lbs
- Enclosure Color Black
- Body Material Magnesium alloy
Main Features
- Resolution 12.24 megapixels
- Color Support Color
- Optical Sensor Type Exmor CMOS
- Total Pixels 13,053,000 pixels
- Effective Sensor Resolution 12,246,000 pixels
- Field of View Crop Factor 1.5
- Sensor Dust Reduction Yes
- Sensor Features Anti-Dust technology
- Light Sensitivity ISO 100, ISO 160, ISO 200, ISO 400, ISO 800, ISO 1600, ISO 3200, ISO 4000, ISO 5000, ISO auto
- Shooting Programs Sunset, Landscape, Portrait mode, Night portrait
- Special Effects Deep, Clear, Light, Sepia, Vivid, Sunset, Neutral, Portrait, Landscape, Night View, Autumn Leaves, Black & White
- Image Stabilizer Optical (Super Steady Shot)
- Max Shutter Speed 1/8000 sec
- Image stabilizer feature Optical stabilization helps prevent blurry pictures, especially for handheld cameras at slow shutter speeds or when using high optical zoom. This camera utilizes built-in Super SteadyShot stabilization to assist in taking sharper pictures.
- Min Shutter Speed 30 sec
- X-sync Speed 1/250 sec
- Exposure Metering Spot, Multi-segment, Center-weighted
- Exposure Modes Bulb, Manual, Program, Automatic, Shutter-priority, Aperture-priority
- Exposure Range EV 0-20 ( ISO 100 )
- Exposure Compensation ±3 EV range, in 1/2 or 1/3 EV steps
- Exposure Metering Zones 40
- White Balance Custom, Presets, Automatic
- White Balance Presets Flash, Shade, Cloudy, Daylight, Fluorescent, 2500K - 9900K, Tungsten light
- White Balance Bracketing Yes
- Still Image Format RAW, JPEG, RAW + JPEG
- Remote Control Remote control - Infrared
- TV Tuner None
Memory / Storage
- Flash Memory None
- Supported Flash Memory Microdrive, CompactFlash, Memory Stick Duo, Memory Stick PRO Duo
- Floppy Drive None
- Image Storage RAW JPEG, RAW 4288 x 2856, 4272 x 2848, 3104 x 2064, 2128 x 1424, 4272 x 2400, 3104 x 1744, 2128 x 1200
Camera Flash
- Camera Flash Flip-up
- Guide Number (m / ISO 100) 12
- Flash Modes Auto mode, Fill-in mode, Flash OFF mode, Rear curtain sync, Red-eye reduction
- Red Eye Reduction Yes
- Features AF illuminator, Flash +/- compensation, Flash exposure bracketing, Wireless off-camera control
Lens System
- Auto Focus TTL phase detection
- Auto Focus Points (Zones) 11
- Lens System Mounting Minolta A-type
Additional Features
- Self Timer Yes
- Self Timer Delay 2 sec, 10 sec
- Flash Terminal Hot shoe, PC terminal
- Additional Features AE lock, AF lock, DPOF support, Direct print, Auto power save, Contrast control, Histogram display, Sharpness control, Brightness control, PictBridge support, Saturation control, Eye-Start AF system, PRINT Image Matching, USB 2.0 compatibility, Digital noise reduction, Dynamic Range Optimizer, RGB primary color filter, Display brightness control, Depth-of-field preview button
Viewfinder
- Viewfinder Type Optical - Fixed eye-level pentaprism
- Field Coverage 95%
- Magnification 0.9 x
- Dioptric Correction Range -3 to +1
- Viewfinder Frames Autofocus frame
Display
- Type LCD display - TFT active matrix - 3 in - Color
- Display Form Factor Built-in
- Display Format 921,600 pixels
Digital Player (Recorder)
- Type None
Microphone
- Type None
Connections
- Connector Type 1 x HDMI output, 1 x Composite video output, 1 x USB, 1 x Remote control, 1 x DC power input
- Expansion Slot(s) 1 x CompactFlash Card - Type I/II, Memory Stick PRO Duo
Software
- Software Drivers & Utilities, Sony Remote Camera Control, Sony Image Data Lightbox SR, Sony Picture Motion Browser, Sony Image Data Converter SR
System Requirements for PC Connection
- Operating System Support MS Windows XP, MS Windows 2000, MS Windows Vista, Apple Mac OS X 10.1.3 or later
- Peripheral Devices USB port, CD-ROM drive
Miscellaneous
- Carrying Case None
- Included Accessories Body cap, Dust cap, Lens cap, Shoe cap, Lens hood, Eyepiece cover, Shoulder strap
- Cables Included Video cable, USB cable
Power
- Power Device Battery charger - External
Battery
- Supported Battery Sony NP-FM500H
- Supported Battery 1 x Li-ion rechargeable battery - 1650 mAh ( Included )
Manufacturer Warranty
- Service & Support 1 year warranty
- Service & Support Details Limited warranty - 1 year
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 0.9
- CNET Labs Raw shot to shot time 0.6
- CNET Labs Shot to shot time typical 0.5
- CNET Labs Shutter lag bright 0.5
- CNET Labs Shutter lag dim 1.2
- CNET Labs Typical burst speed 4.8
- CNET Labs Wake up time 0.5
Product series
-

Sony Alpha DSLR-A700 (with 16mm-105mm lens)
Manufacturer: Sony
Specs: SLR, 12.24 megapixels, 6.5 x, 3 in LCD display
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Sony Alpha DSLR-A700 (with 18mm-70mm lens)
Manufacturer: Sony
Specs: SLR, 12.24 megapixels, 3.9 x, 3 in LCD display
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Manufacturer: Sony
Specs: SLR, 12.24 megapixels, 3 in LCD display
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Sony Alpha DSLR-A700 (with 18mm-70mm lens and 75mm-300mm lens)
Manufacturer: Sony
Specs: SLR, 12.24 megapixels, 3.9 x, 3 in LCD display
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Sony Alpha DSLR-A700 (with 18mm-200mm lens)
Manufacturer: Sony
Specs: SLR, 12.24 megapixels, 11 x, 3 in LCD display
Accessories
- Sony SAL-18250 DT 18-250mm f/3.5-6.3 lens (32718721)579.00 - 579.99
- Sony SAL-1680Z Zeiss Vario-Sonnar T* DT 16-80mm f/3.5-4.5 lens (32156914)699.95 - 806.09
- Sony SAL50F18 - lens - 50 mm (33688119)149.00 - 149.99
- Sony flash memory card - 16 GB - Memory Stick PRO Duo Mark2 (32849582)61.47 - 99.99
- Sony High Speed Memory Stick Pro Duo 2GB (31326436)41.95 - 78.95
- SanDisk Memory Stick Pro Duo 1GB (31230286)14.02 - 19.00
Manufacturer info
- Sony
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse Sony products on Shopper.com
-
- Website: http://www.sonystyle.com
- Address:
16765 W. Bernardo Dr., San Diego, CA 92127 - Phone: 1-877-865-SONY
- Email: contact@sel.sony.com
- Fax: 941-768-7790









