The Good
Aggressive price; excellent, low-noise images; speedy performance; long battery life.
The Bad
Can't save custom settings; limited metering options; continuous-shooting mode snaps a maximum of four shots.
The Bottom Line
A low price boosts the Canon EOS Digital Rebel's appeal for amateur film-SLR photographers going digital and high-end snapshooters who want to experiment more.
Editor's note: We have changed the rating in this review to reflect recent changes in our rating scale. Click here to find out more.
| =""> These buttons are easily distinguishable by feel, but they're a bit too shallow to press comfortably. |
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| Though the power switch seems awkwardly placed, we never accidentally turned off the EOS Digital Rebel while working with the mode dial. | With buttons on the upper-right corner of the camera body, you can choose a drive or metering mode, lock exposure, or select an autofocus point. |
| =""> The EOS Digital Rebel supports high-capacity CompactFlash cards. We recommend using those with accelerated write speeds. |
PowerShot G5C-5050 Zoommore
| =""> Even after we'd taken more than 1,000 shots (50 percent of them with the flash) the EOS Digital Rebel's battery was still going strong. |
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| Though this scene came out well with the partial metering (left), we got worse results than expected from the default evaluative metering (right). | |
Canon's digital cameras
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| Test photos from the EOS Digital Rebel show excellent dynamic range and very accurate color reproduction. |
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| In image sharpness and detail, the EOS Digital Rebel holds its own against pricier cameras such as the EOS 10D. |


