Os dejo los settings que usa Arthur Morris, afamado fotógrafo de aves con su EOS 40DTambién en este boletín, hace un repaso a la EOS 40D
Un saludo
Extraído de: BIRDS AS ART BULLETIN #268
AUGUST 12, 2008
CANON EOS-40D SETTINGS
As requested in dozens of e-mails, let’s take a look at how I set up my 40D.
Menu Items
Red Menu 1. Quality: RAW, Red-eye: On, Beep: On. Shoot w/o card: Off, Review time: 8 sec.
Red Menu 2. Color Space: Adobe RGB, Picture Style: Neutral
Blue Menu 2. Highlight Alert: Enable, AF Point display: Enable, Histogram: RBG
Yellow Menu 1. Auto Power Off: 30 minutes, File Numbering: Continuous, Auto Rotate: ON (computer),
Yellow Menu 2. LCD Brightness: one notch below the brightest, Date/Time: make sure that the date and the time are set accurately at all times even when you travel to new time zones.
Custom Functions (shown only if settings are different from the default settings).
C Fn 1-group: 3/ISO Expansion: 1: On, 6: Safety Shift/ Enable (TvAv).
C Fn II group: 3/Highlight Tone Priority: Enable.
C Fn III group: all at default except 7/Mirror Lock (Enabled when needed).
C Fn IV group: 1/Shutter Button/AF-ON Button: 1 Metering + AF start/AF stop, 2/AE-ON/AE lock button switch: 1: Enable.
C Fn III-1/Auto focus/Drive/Lens drive when AF impossible is supposed to work as it does on the EOS-1D MIII, but my experience is that is does not. When C Fn III-1 is set to 1: Focus search off, the AF system will not attempt to focus on anything that is not very close to the point of accurate focus. As with the MIII, it is best to pre-focus manually when using C Fn III-1. With the 40D, however, the system is not at all responsive to birds that are relatively close to the actual point of focus as the MIII does. The huge problem with the 40D is that even with C Fn-1 set to 1/Focus search off, the AF system will drop focus immediately and search for the background if the sensor falls off of the subject. (This is not the case with the MIII.)




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