Konica Minolta Dg 5d User Manual


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  3. Konica Minolta Maxxum 5d Manual
Quickly on the heels of its first dSLR, Konica Minolta shrinks the form factor and the price without losing in-camera image stabilization.
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Page 1:Intro and Highlights

Review First Posted: 10/31/2005

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6.1-megapixel CCD delivers uninterpolatedimages as large as 3,008 x 2,000 pixels.
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Interchangeable lens mount hosts a wide rangeof Konica Minolta lenses.
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Advanced Konica Minolta Body-Based Anti-Shake Technology.
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Full manual exposure control, with Scene settings, and refined control of image adjustment.
  1. All lenses.1) of the Konica Minolta AF series can be used with the Dynax 5D and are compatible to the Konica Minolta Anti-Shake System. KONICA MINOLTA ANTI-SHAKE SYSTEM What sets the DYNAX 5D’s Anti-Shake apart from all other camera-shake compensation systems is its exclusive CCD-Shift mechanism. It’s so effective you can shoot at shutter.
  2. Manual exposure. Just as it states; you have complete control over the exposure. The digital subject programs optimize the camera's exposure, white balance and image processing systems for specific conditions and subjects. Let's look to the top right of the Konica Minolta Maxxum 5D, the.
  3. Camera manuals and free digital camera pdf instructions. Find the user manual you need for your camera and more at ManualsOnline. Konica Minolta Digital Camera 5D User Guide ManualsOnline.com.
  4. Konica Minolta is known as supplier selling the range of stuff like automotive. Manuals.World collected 266 rare docs of this brand. Now you're reading a user guide for Konica Minolta Digital Camera 5D.
  5. Details about Konica Minolta Dynax Maxxum 5D Digital Camera DG-5D with Sony N50 Lens. The Konica Minolta Maxxum 5D is a high-performance interchangeable-lens digital SLR camera that inherits the revolutionary technology of its predecessor, the Konica Minolta Maxxum 7D. Manual and Carrying Case. We keep several different sizes of boxes.

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Manufacturer Overview

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When Konica Minolta introduced the Maxxum 7D, its first dSLR, it was big news. The 7D body was big and the price was pretty high, too. Because Minolta was one of the leading film-based SLR manufacturers of the early- and middle-1970s, millions of Minolta film SLR owners have been anxiously awaiting just the right digital model to use their extensive collections of Minolta lenses. The Maxxum 5D shrinks the form factor and the price of the original 7D, but it keeps the in-camera image stabilization that made the 7D so compelling.

The new Maxxum 5D also shrinks the number of dials and buttons of the 7D into a simpler but still comprehensive set that many Maxxum fans will immediately recognize. The 5D offers the same 6.1-megapixel sensor as the 7D, yielding images as large as 3,008 x 2,000 pixels. Also like the 7D, the 5D incorporates technology unique to Konica Minolta cameras: anti-shake technology in its body, which does not require a special image-stabilized lens. This one feature adds tremendous value, turning all Bergey's manual second edition free download. your Minolta autofocus lenses into image-stabilized lenses. With conventional anti-shake lenses typically costing hundreds of dollars more than models without anti-shake, the built-in anti-shake capability of the Konica Minolta Maxxum 5D could easily be worth thousands of dollars to anyone with a large lens collection.

The 7D's LCD does display images at a slightly higher resolution (although you really have to look at them side by side to notice). It also transfers data through its USB port a little quicker. The Maxxum 5D doesn't offer all the options of the 7D, but we didn't miss any of those rarely-used settings.

But the 5D adds a few things, too. Chief among them is what Konica Minolta calls Digital Subject Programs, more commonly called Scene exposure modes on other cameras. There are five on the Konica Minolta 5D: Portrait, Sports, Landscape, Sunset, and Night Portrait.

Other characteristics and specifications of the Konica Minolta Maxxum 5D are fairly typical for a camera of its class, with all the features you'd expect in a basic digital SLR, but wrapped in a uniquely 'Minolta' package. The reduced set of external buttons and knobs are not intimidating even at first glance, and after just a short time learning the camera's interface you'll be able to set the 5D for any situation.

Highlights

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  • 6.1-megapixel APS-C interline primary-color CCD delivering resolutions as high as 3,008 x 2,000 pixels.
  • 12-Bit A/D conversion.
  • Digital SLR design for a true optical viewfinder.
  • 2.5-inch TFT color, low temperature polysilicon LCD monitor for image and menu review.
  • Interchangeable A-type bayonet lens mount accommodates a wide range of Konica Minolta AF lenses.
  • Auto and Manual focus options, with adjustable nine-point AF area, and Single and Continuous AF modes.
  • Auto, Program AE (with Program Shift), Aperture Priority, Shutter Priority, and Manual shooting modes.
  • Portrait, Sports, Landscape, Sunset, and Night Portrait exposure modes.
  • Shutter speeds from 1/4,000 to 30 seconds, with a Bulb setting for manual control of long exposures.
  • 14-segment honeycomb pattern metering, Center-Weighted, and Spot metering options, with AE Lock function.
  • Adjustable ISO from 100 to 3,200 equivalents, with an Auto setting.
  • Built-in, pop-up flash with four main operating modes and a Slow-Sync function.
  • External, proprietary flash hot-shoe for Konica Minolta accessory flash units.
  • External PC-style flash sync terminal.
  • Built-in support for wireless TTL flash exposure with certain Konica Minolta flashes.
  • Continuous Advance and Interval shooting modes.
  • Digital Effects option controls contrast, saturation, sharpness, and hue adjustment.
  • Adjustable White Balance setting with a manual option and full range of Kelvin temperature settings.
  • Color modes include Natural (sRGB), Natural Plus (sRGB), Portrait (sRGB), Landscape (sRGB), Sunset (sRGB), Night View (sRGB), Night Portrait (sRGB), Black & White (sRGB), Adobe RGB and Adobe RGB with embedded color profile.
  • RAW and JPEG file formats.
  • Images saved on CompactFlash Type I or II memory cards, Microdrive compatible.
  • 'Storage-Class' USB 2.0 High-Speed interface.
  • USB 2.0 High-Speed cable and interface software for connecting to a computer and downloading images.
  • NTSC or PAL selectable video output signal, with cable included.
  • Power supplied by a single high-capacity lithium-ion battery pack or separate AC adapter (available as an accessory).
  • Optional vertical handgrip and wired remote control accessories.
  • DPOF (Digital Print Order Format), Exif 2.2 and PictBridge compliant.

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Konica Minolta Dynax 5d Manual Pdf

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Konica Minolta Maxxum/Dynax 5D
Overview
TypeSingle-lens reflex
Lens
LensInterchangeable via Minolta A-type bayonet mount
Sensor/medium
Sensor23.5 × 15.7 mm CCD
Maximum resolution3,008 × 2,000 (6.1 megapixels)
ASA/ISO rangeISO 100, 200, 400, 800, 1600, 3200, and Auto
StorageCompactFlash (CF) (Type I or Type II) or Microdrive
Focusing
Focus modesSingle-Shot, Continuous, Auto, Manual
Focus areasTTLCCD line sensors (9-points, 8 lines with center cross-hair sensor)
Exposure/metering
Exposure modesManual, Shutter-priority, Aperture-priority, Program, Auto, 5 scene modes (Portrait, Sports Action, Landscape, Sunset, Night Portrait)
EV 1 to 20 (at ISO 100 with F1.4 lens)
Metering modes14-segment Honeycomb, Spot, Center Weighted
Flash
FlashBuilt-in pop-up with hotshoe
Shutter
ShutterElectronically controlled, vertical-traverse, focal-plane Shutter
Shutter speed range1/4000 sec – 30 sec, or Bulb
Continuous shootingRAW / RAW+JPEG: 3 frame/s, up to 5 frames, JPEG Extra Fine: 3 frame/s, up to 12 frames, JPEG Fine: 3 frame/s, up to 15 frames, JPEG Standard: 3 frame/s, up to 19 frames
Viewfinder
ViewfinderEye-level fixed pentaprism
Image processing
Custom WBAuto, 6 adjustable presets, Manual, Color temperature
General
Rear LCD monitor2.5' TFT LCD, 115,000 pixels
BatteryNP-400 Lithium-Ionrechargeable battery
Weight590 g (1.30 lb)

The Konica Minolta Maxxum 5D (its North American market name; labelled Dynax 5D in Europe/Hong Kong and α-5 Digital and α Sweet Digital in Japan; officially named DG-5D) was a digital single-lens reflex camera introduced by Konica Minolta in 2005.[1]

The camera has a sensor-shifting image stabilization feature inherited from the Konica Minolta Maxxum 7D.

See also[edit]

  • First frame black (a.k.a. 'Error 58')

References[edit]

  1. ^'Konica Minolta Maxxum 5D announcement'. DPreview.com.

External links[edit]

Media related to Konica Minolta Dynax 5D at Wikimedia Commons

Konica Minolta Manuals

Minolta/Konica Minolta/SonyDSLR and SLTA-mount timeline
Sensor200420052006200720082009201020112012201320142015201620172018
3412341234123412341234123412341234123412341234123412341234
ProfessionalFull frameα900α99α99 II
α850
High-endAPS-CDG-7Dα700α77α77 II
Midrangeα65α68
Upper-entryα55α57
α100α550α580α58
DG-5Dα500α560
α450
Entry-levelα33α35α37
α350α380α390
α300α330
α200α230α290
Early modelsMinolta 7000 with SB-70/SB-70S (1986) · Minolta 9000 with SB-90/SB-90S (1986) (Still video SLRs)
Minolta MS-C1100 (1992) · Minolta RD-175 (1995)
  • Single-lens translucent (SLT) camera
  • 5-axis in-body image stabilization (bold)
  • HD video capable (Video AF)
  • Dual phase-detection AF (italic)

Konica Minolta Maxxum 5d Manual

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