06-10-2015 04:50 PM
06-10-2015 09:58 PM
06-10-2015 10:55 PM
The viewfinder has a diopter adjustment wheel in the corner which lets you adjust the camera to your eyesight. Point it at a plain white wall (something with no contrast -- even a plain blue sky would work). You can deliberately de-focus the camera lens. Now adjust the wheel in the corner of your viewfinder until the display inside your viewfinder (focus points, etc.) are all tack-sharp. If the your eyesight is beyond what the adjustment wheel will allow you to set then you can buy option dioptric adjustment lenses. You remove the eyecup from the viewfinder (squeeze and slide upward) and slide in the replacement which has a dioptric adjustment.
As for remote control and using an iPad... Canon does not have a specific accessory for this. I use a "CamRanger" for my 5D III. The device is roughly the size of a cellphone and connects to the USB port. It includes software to control the camera either from a mobile phone, tablet (I use my iPad) or computer (Windows or Mac).
06-11-2015 12:34 AM
06-11-2015 12:39 AM
06-11-2015 12:53 AM
06-11-2015 11:03 AM - edited 06-11-2015 11:50 AM
Which is it? 7D Mark I? Or 7D Mark II? You list both in your headline.
The answer may be the same in both cases. I don't use an iPad, so don't know for certain.
Can you tether the camera to the iPad with the supplied USB cable? If so, install EOS Utilities that was supplied on the disk that came with the camera (or download it from one of the Canon websites). With that, just put the camera in Live View and you can control it from the computer, including previewiing images and focusing.
No, Canon didn't "omit" or "forget" WiFi with 7D-series. Like all their more pro-oriented cameras, instead of built-in WiFi that would be severely effected and limited by the metal-clad (magnesium) camera body, they offer separate accessory WFT modules that have faster, more reliable and much, much longer range WLAN connectivity. 70D, 6D and many of the lower models have built-in WiFi that's got approx. 25 or 30 foot range. The WFT modules used by 7D and above have as much as 300 or 400 foot range. The original 7D and the 7DII use different WFT modules, and unfortunately they aren't cheap.
The original 7D uses WFT-E5 (E5A in N. America). The 7DII uses WFT-E7/E7A (version 2).
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Alan Myers
San Jose, Calif., USA
"Walk softly and carry a big lens."
GEAR: 5DII, 7D(x2), 50D(x3), some other cameras, various lenses & accessories
FLICKR & EXPOSUREMANAGER
06-11-2015 11:21 AM
Canon makes additional diopter eyepiece adapters. Not sure about 7D Mark II, but here is for Mark I.
http://shop.usa.canon.com/shop/en/catalog/dioptric-adjustment-lens-eg--4
06-11-2015 11:25 AM
WiFi is a fairly niche feature. Many don't want it and consider it an unnecessary expense. Only the 6D, 70D, and T6i/T6s have it and, of those, many owners of those cameras don't use it.
The CamRanger isn't cheap -- here in the US it's about $300.
From time to time I wanted to be able to pull select images from my camera onto my iPad -- so I could review them in more detail without waiting to return home where I could import them to my computer. I started by getting an EyeFi card.
The EyeFi looks like a normal SD card, but has a WiFi radio in it and firmware that integrates with the camera. After you shoot a photo, the WiFi can transfer the image to another device (it would sync to an Internet cloud-hosted service which, in turn, syncs to your computer... but you can also put it in a devcie-to-device mode where it will transfer to a device such as an iPad even if you're not in range of any WiFi infrastructure.)
The biggest immedaite challenge I noticed was that it cannot transfer while you are using the camera. You have to stop shooting. After your camera has been idle for several seconds, the EyeFi will activate its network (it normally keeps the radio off to save power) and start transmitting. Hopefully your iPad is "on" (which drains power). When the transfer is happening, it's very slow. It takes takes a while for each image to transfer even if they're JPEGs. I normally only shoot RAW. RAW images take a very long time to transmit each image. I would shoot and then want to review the shots but found I was waiting minutes between each shot before anything showed up on the iPad.
A secondary limitation is that the EyeFi only has one function: image transfer. There is no camera remote control capability.
CamRanger provides a much richer interface. They connect via the camera's USB port and they use Canon's APIs to control the camera (from that respect it's no different than using a "tethered" USB connection to a computer and controlling the camera via the computer. This means you get a streaming video of the "live view" through the camera, can control camera focus, control all exposure settings, etc. When you shoot a RAW, the RAW contains an embedded JPEG "thumbnail" image of the shot. The CamRanger immediately transfers these (as you shoot) so you see the "film roll" of all thumbnails you've been shooting. You then tap only those images that you actually want to transfer (so you don't waste time transferring everything -- though you can tell it transfer everything if you want.) Also, the WiFi transfer speed between the CamRanger and iPad (or computer) is fast. Transfers don't take very long. The CamRanger has it's own battery so it doesn't draw down the camera power while in-use.
So yes... it's more expensive, but I think they did a solid implmentation with the product. Given that this whole thing is a niche market anyway, the CamRanger doesn't exactly fly off the store shelves. That means they're investing their engineering resources to a limited market and the cost per-product is naturally going to be more.
06-11-2015 12:30 PM
Hi guys, I have both mark 1 & 2.
The diopter lens is NOT the issue, I am partially sighted, what I want is to use my iPad as a live view screen to monito the images as I take them.
02/20/2025: New firmware updates are available.
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