Among the few key enhancements to the 30D, Canon has upped the number of sequential frames that you can capture in continuous-shooting mode to 30 JPEG or 11 raw shots, from 23 or 6, respectively; however the 5fps rate remains. In practice, however, it typically delivered 14 raw shots until the buffer slowed it down, as well as essentially an unlimited number of highest-quality JPEG shots, albeit at a clip of 3.5fps. Generally, unless youre shooting very fast action such as car racing, that kind of burst-shooting performance should suffice.
Additionally, the 30D now has a real spot meter, though the 3.5 percent metering circle isnt quite as tight as other models 2 percent. Though that might sound like a quibble, it means you wont see as much of a difference between the 30Ds 9 percent partial metering mode and the spot meter as you would between other cameras metering modes. Canon has also added the ability to set ISO sensitivity in 1/3-stop increments; ironically, that would be more valuable if the 30Ds high-ISO performance were worse. It does help, though, when you need more exposure latitude for very fine control over your depth of field.
The larger 2.5-inch LCD has a wider viewing angle than that of the 1.8-inch model on the 20D, which always comes in handy for reviewing your shots with onlookers. And Canons Picture Styles are a good way of organizing the myriad custom settings-sharpness, tone, saturation, and contrast-that the camera has always allowed you to control. Finally, Canon rates the shutter durability on this model for as much as 100, 000 cycles. I did not test this claim, for obvious reasons.
There are a few aspects of the 30D that Canon didnt change but that could have used an update. The battery didnt last for the length of one of my shooting sessions, or about 250 photos. The lens still casts a shadow when using the onboard flash at wide-angle focal lengths with some lenses. And the viewfinder still shows only 95 percent of the scene. Nonetheless, it remains the top-notch model that the 20D was.
If you dont need the better continuous-shooting performance, spot metering, or the larger LCD, you might as well save about$200 and buy a 20D while you still can.