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The auto focus system covers 15.7" (40cm) to infinity in normal focus mode and from 3.94" to 19.7" (10-50cm) in Macro mode. As you can see from the animation above, the lens retracts into the camera when powered down and is protected by a built in lens cover. On power up it only takes about two seconds to extend the lens.
Auto focus modes available: Hybrid, Continuous or Contrast.
Hybrid is a combination of phase difference and contrast focus and is the default.
Continuous means the lens is always focusing even when the shutter release is
half-pressed (which normally locks the focus.) Contrast is used if the phase differential
sensor is blocked. The AF Area is selectable between 7-point multi, spot or free, the
latter allows you to manually position the AF area anywhere in the frame using the 4-way
controller. In addition to auto focus, there is fixed infinity mode and manual
focus.
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The EX-P600 is compatible with Canon auxiliary lenses - TC-DC58 Tele Converter,
WC-DC58N Wide converter and the 250D Closeup Lens. (These lenses require the use of the
lens converter adapter LU-60A. 58mm filters may also be used with this adapter.)
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The optical viewfinder is large and bright, it shows approximately 85% of the captured
image. There is no diopter adjustment. The two LEDs indicates camera power, flash
charging, focus lock, memory error / memory full / battery low conditions.
![]() The built-in flash has modes for auto, fill, red-eye reduction and off. The working range is approx. 0.6 to 9.5 feet / 0.2 to 2.9 m (W) , 0.6 to 6.6 feet / 0.2 to 2.0 m (T).
Flash range can be greatly extended by using an external flash unit. A standard PC
sync port is located on the side of the camera but it lacks an accessory shoe.
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Located on the top are the power on/off and shutter release buttons with the zoom lens
control around the shutter.
![]() Live framing, playback review and menu operations are carried out on the Pro EX-P600's large 2-inch color LCD monitor. It has twice as many pixels as previous 2-inch color LCD screens and offers a resolution of 480 x 240 pixels. If you have a hard time seeing the menus on those tiny 1.5-inch screens, you'll love this one.
Controls along the top are Focus and Flash mode buttons. Down the left side are the
Bracketing, AE-Lock and the EX Shortcut/Delete buttons. The Mode Dial has positions for
Auto, Best Shot, Aperture priority, Shutter-speed priority, Manual, Movie, Voice and
Playback. The MENU button calls up and dismisses the onsreen menu system. The 4-way
controller lets you easily navigate menu screens or select images for playback, the
center SET button accepts menu selections. Next to the 4-way controller is the
Self-timer/Remote and Preview (review last shot captured) buttons. The DISP button turns the
color LCD on/off and controls the amount of information that is overlayed on the screen.
![]() The EX-P600 has ~9MB of internal memory for saving images and movie clips. It supports use of any size Secure Digital up to 1GB via the expansion card slot on the bottom. Image data can be copied to/from internal memory and a flash card via the Playback menu.
Use a card like this
SanDisk 512MB Ultra II SD card and you'll never have to worry about running
out of space again - even on an extended vacation.
![]() (* SD memory card is optional, not included)
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The Pro EX-P600 is the first Exilim to offer Audio-Video out capability, the video format
is selectable between NTSC and PAL standards. The USB 1.1 port is for image download to
the host PC, it is Mass Storage compliant and PictBridge compatible. The DC IN is for an
optional AC power supply or external battery pack. Another Exilim first is a standard PC
flash sync port for connecting external flash units.
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The NP-40 lithium battery is a 3.7 volt pack rated at 1230mA and
Casio claims approx. 260 shots (LCD on) in record mode, and 300 minutes of continuous
playback. The included BC-L30 rapid charger will replenish the battery in 2 hours or
less and plugs directly into the AC outlet.
![]() Included with the EX-P600 outfit is this handy infrared remote control. It can trip the shutter, control the zoom and allows you to access the camera menus. This is ideal to eliminate any possible camera shake when on a tripod taking self-portraits, macro or Bulb exposures. |
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