Canon EOS D60
The Canon EOS D60 is a discontinued 6.3 megapixel digital single lens reflex camera body, announced by Canon on February 22, 2002. It is part of the Canon EOS range, and accepts Canon EF, TS-E and MP-E lenses, but not Canon's later digital-only EF-S lens range.
The EOS D60 sits in the prosumer line of digital SLR cameras. It succeeded the three megapixel EOS D30 and was replaced by the improved, six megapixel EOS 10D.
In America, its initial pricing was US$1,999 for the basic body, or US$2,199 including battery, charger, and DC kit.
Features
The EOS D60 features:- 22.7 x 15.1 mm CMOS sensor
- 6.3 megapixel effective
- Max resolution 3072 x 2048
- FOV crop
- Canon EF lens mount
- 3-point auto focus
- 100, 200, 400, 800, 1000 ISO speed equivalent
- 30 to 1/4000 s shutter speed and bulb
- TTL 35 zone SPC metering: evaluative, center weighted, partial
- Exposure compensation -2 EV to +2 EV in 1/3 EV or 1/2 EV steps
- Auto White Balance
- Eye-level pentaprism viewfinder
- 1.8 in color TFT liquid-crystal monitor
- E-TTL flash mode
- 3 frames per second continuous shooting
- Dimensions : 150 x 107 x 75 mm
- Weight : 780 g