Konica Minolta Dimage A2 digital camera
alt=”Digital camera” src=”http://farm1.static.flickr.com/99/271891479_ab7af16c79.jpg” width=”400″/>
Kodak Image captain Manufactured in 2004 by Konica Minolta Holdings, Inc., Japan. A “SLR-Like” 8.0 megapixel digital camera. Before it was a Minolta GT 28mm equivalent to 200mm (in 35mm film camera) f/2.8-3.5 lens and a 2 / 3 inch CCD to produce a 8.0 Megapixel 3264×2448 pixels or image. Like the light A1, the A-2 had a single image stabilization that actually moves the CCD sensor to adjust the camera movement. Personally I used to hand hold exhibitions down to one tenth of a second out tack sharp! This became so successful, which was used in the digital Maxxum SLR and then to the Sony Alpha line. Compact Flash storage was or Microdrive cards. He had a selectable TTL metering system to any Multi-segment metering, center-weighted or Spot mode. This support modes of operation of full program, aperture preferred automatic, automatic and manual shutter preferred full. Special program was also Scene modes: Portrait, Sports, Sunset, night and text. Up to four sets of camera settings can also save and recall by the user. It simulated ISO ratings from 64 to 800. It was NOT interchangeable lenses, but gave the impression of a small 35 mm SLR, especially with the grip accessory show here (I had an extra battery or lithium ion could be fitted with six AA lithium or NiMH in a hurry). Could shoot at approx. 2.7 fps for 3 images and the shutter support speeds up to 1 / 4000 sec. There was no optical viewfinder, which used an electronic viewfinder with a ferroelectric LCD (similar to the DiMAGE 5, but higher resolution) that can be turned upward by 90 degrees, provided a frame coverage of 100%, set diopter and had an automatic mode to detect eye location for the ignition. It could even shoot short movie clips! Before high-end accessories such as Minolta dedicated flash units and wired remote controls. You could focus as close as 4 inches in macro mode. Had a small flash that you can perform red-eye reduction or not fill flash outdoors. Detection are used in contrast with the approach. The manual approach was provided by an electronic “focus by wire” ring at the rear of the lens body, and “after AF Manual Focus” was an option. In short, you can do almost anything you can do (and some things could not) with a high-end 35mm SLR on the market that, except for the time to change the lens. It was powered by a battery NP-400 lithium ion battery (7.4V 1500mAh). See also: / reviews / specs / Konica_Minolta / konicaminol …


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One Comment
I loved mine to death. Sometimes I still miss that beast. Best laid out camera I’ve ever seen.
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