Canon A40 owners: How long is the shutter delay? *update* Looks like I'll get one..

jlee

Lifer
Sep 12, 2001
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I was looking at a Canon A40 today, and I tried taking a few pictures with it...it seems to delay about a second, after which it flashes/takes the picture. Is there a setting to reduce the delay to be more like a standard film camera, or do I have to spend a bit more than $300 for low delay?
 

Renob

Diamond Member
Jun 18, 2000
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I think if you press the button half way and hold it till your ready to take your pick then press it all the way it works way faster. I have a Canon S300 and thats how it works.
 

microAmp

Diamond Member
Jul 5, 2000
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Originally posted by: Renob
I think if you press the button half way and hold it till your ready to take your pick then press it all the way it works way faster. I have a Canon S300 and thats how it works.

I have the A40 and the button being pressed half way works like you said.
 

xchangx

Golden Member
Mar 23, 2000
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pushing it half way down makes the camera focus, then pushing it all the way down after it beeps takes the picture
 

Renob

Diamond Member
Jun 18, 2000
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pushing it half way down makes the camera focus, then pushing it all the way down after it beeps takes the picture


And do you agree that it works the shutter much faster or what?
 

jlee

Lifer
Sep 12, 2001
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Originally posted by: xchangx
pushing it half way down makes the camera focus, then pushing it all the way down after it beeps takes the picture

I did focus it first. Do you have to hold the focus button down before you take the picture? If so, that may be why..possibly it was re-focusing.

 

Renob

Diamond Member
Jun 18, 2000
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Do you have to hold the focus button down before you take the picture

Yes.
BTW read the camera User Guide
 

xchangx

Golden Member
Mar 23, 2000
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I'm not saying that it works it faster, I was saying that, that's probably the reason it's taking a while. On my A20, if you push it all the way down first, it takes it a while to focus.
 

AreaCode707

Lifer
Sep 21, 2001
18,447
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If you focus the camera first (by holding the button halfway down) and then click, it responds slowly enough that you can lose the picture. Pointing and clicking actually takes a faster shot, but the focus will be completely gone, unless you've set it yourself. The shutter speed is the only negative thing I've found about this camera.
 

jlee

Lifer
Sep 12, 2001
48,518
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Originally posted by: HotChic
If you focus the camera first (by holding the button halfway down) and then click, it responds slowly enough that you can lose the picture. Pointing and clicking actually takes a faster shot, but the focus will be completely gone, unless you've set it yourself. The shutter speed is the only negative thing I've found about this camera.

So, would you consider it too slow for action shots? Example..taking pictures of horse jumping, downhill skiing, rally races (when you only see cars for several seconds as they go by), etc?

 

bmacd

Lifer
Jan 15, 2001
10,869
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Originally posted by: CadetLee
Originally posted by: HotChic
If you focus the camera first (by holding the button halfway down) and then click, it responds slowly enough that you can lose the picture. Pointing and clicking actually takes a faster shot, but the focus will be completely gone, unless you've set it yourself. The shutter speed is the only negative thing I've found about this camera.

So, would you consider it too slow for action shots? Example..taking pictures of horse jumping, downhill skiing, rally races (when you only see cars for several seconds as they go by), etc?

good question...i wanna know for motorcycles....the shutter may be too slow to capture anything good on them.

-=bmacd=-
 

Lars

Diamond Member
Jan 10, 2001
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Most digital cameras are kind of slow and not suitable for action shots. (only thing I do not like about my digital camera)
 

jlee

Lifer
Sep 12, 2001
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Originally posted by: Lars
Most digital cameras are kind of slow and not suitable for action shots. (only thing I do not like about my digital camera)

My wallet isn't suitable for developing film, so I'm trying to get what I can....lol ;)

 

jlee

Lifer
Sep 12, 2001
48,518
223
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Update....tried it out again - if you hold the button halfway down (until it focuses) before you take the picture (instead of focusing, releasing, then taking the picture), it is MUCH faster...fast enough that I think I'll own a Canon A40 in the near future. :)

Just thought I'd let you all know..