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Epson R-D1

Epson R-D1
Overview
TypeDigital rangefinder camera
Lens
LensLeica M-mount
Sensor/medium
Sensor23.7 x 15.6 mm, 1.53 × CCD APS-C
Maximum resolution6.1 megapixels
Film speedISO 200-1600
Storage mediaSD
Focusing
Focus modesManual
Exposure/metering
Exposure modesManual, Aperture priority
Exposure meteringCenter weighted
Flash
FlashFixed hot shoe
Shutter
ShutterElectronically controlled vertical-run focal plane shutter
Shutter speed range1 to 1/2000 s (X-sync: 1/125 s)
Viewfinder
ViewfinderOptical rangefinder (1:1)
Image processing
White balanceAuto, Sunny, Shade, Cloudy, Incan descend, Fluorescent.
General
LCD screen2 inch 235k Dots
BatteryLi-Ion EPALB1 Rechargeable
Dimensions142 x 89 x 40 mm
Weight560 g (body only, without battery)
Made in Japan

The Epson R-D1 is the world's first digital rangefinder camera induced by Epson in March 2004. The R-D1 was a joined venture between Epson, with developed the electrical systems, UI and imaging processor and Cosina wich provided the body (a modified version of the Voigtländer Bessa R2 body) and rangefinder mechanics. It uses the Leica M-mount, allowing compatibility with a wide range of lenses. The mechanical shutter of the R-D1 has to be recocked by hand with is a unique feature for a digital camera.

R-D1

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R-D1 was jointly developed by Seiko Epson and Cosina and manufactured by the latter, which also builds the current Voigtländer cameras. It uses Leica M-mount lenses or earlier Leica screw mount lenses with an adapter.

An unusual feature to note on the R-D1 is that it is a digital camera that has a manually wound shutter with a rapid wind lever. The controls operate in the same way as film-based rangefinder cameras.

Data such as white balance, shutter speed, picture quality, and shots remaining are all displayed with servo driven indicators on a dial like a watch face (made by Epson's parent company Seiko). With the rear screen folded away, it is not obviously a digital camera.

R-D1 and all of the subsequent modifications of the camera have been using the same 1.5× crop factor sensor, interline-transfer CCD (Sony ICX413AQ), the same sensor as used in Pentax *ist D, Nikon D100. The sensor originally dates to 2002.

R-D1s

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The successor of R-D1, the R-D1s was released in March 2006. The Epson R-D1s is mechanically identical to the R-D1, but with a firmware upgrade. It adds:

Users of R-D1 could upgrade their camera to have the same functions.

R-D1x

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The successors of the R-D1s, the R-D1x and R-D1xG[1][2] were made available from 9 April 2009 in Japan only. They feature very similar feature set except for few modifications:

On 17 March 2014, Epson announced that the R-D1x was discontinued.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ R-D1x on the Epson europe website Retrieved 2018-09-16
  2. ^ "R-D1xG page on Epson web site". Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2010-09-19.
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