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The Canon EOS 100 was a 35 mm autofocus SLR camera introduced by Canon in 1991. It was marketed as the EOS Elan in North America. It was the second camera in the EOS range to be targeted at advanced amateur photographers, replacing the EOS 650. Its headline features were near-silent film winding, input of EOS barcode programs, integral auto-zoom flash, twin input dials, an autofocus auxiliary light for low-contrast subjects and five fully automatic modes. ==Design== The look and feel of the EOS 100 had much in common with the T90 and EOS 650. It was based around a polycarbonate body with metal bayonet lens mount. The top left of the body had a ''Command Dial'' for choice of either ''Creative'' or ''Image'' zones and buttons to control the integral flash. The top right of the body had a multi-function ''Main Dial'', buttons for autofocus and film advance control, the shutter release button and an LCD display panel. The back of the body had the ''Quick Control Dial'', used for aperture control, and the ''AE Lock Button'', used to lock exposure settings. Once the ''Command Dial'' had been set for a particular shooting style, all controls could be accessed with the right hand, with the viewfinder feeding back information to the photographer. Image:CanonEOS100LensMount.JPG|Metal bayonet lens mount Image:CanonEOS100TopLeft.JPG|''Command dial'' Image:CanonEOS100TopRight.JPG|LCD display Image:CanonEOS100Back.JPG|''Quick Control Dial'' and ''AE Lock Button'' 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Canon EOS 100」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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