Leica X1

Leica X1
Overview
Maker Leica
Lens
Lens Leica Elmarit 24 mm f/2.8 (35 mm equivalent)
Sensor/Medium
Image sensor type CMOS
Image sensor size 23.6 x 15.7 mm (APS-C type)
Maximum resolution 4272 x 2586 (12 megapixels)
ASA/ISO range 100-3200
Recording medium SD or SDHC card
Focusing
Focus areas 11 focus points
Shutter
Shutter speeds 1/2000s to 30s
Continuous shooting 3 frames per second
Image Processing
Custom WB Yes
General
Rear LCD monitor 2.7 inches with 230,000 pixels
Body composition or special features All-metal body, high-grip leather trim
Dimensions 123.2 x 63.5 x 50.3 mm (4.85 x 2.50 x 1.98 inches)
Weight 283 g including battery
Released 2009/9/9

Leica X1 is a compact fixed-lens, large-sensor digital camera by Leica. The pre-production model was released to reviewers in September 2009.

Leica X1 uses an APS-C (23.6 mm × 15.8 mm) format CMOS sensor with 12.2 megapixels (4272 × 2856 pixels, 3:2 aspect ratio). Fixed 24 mm/2.8 prime lens, equivalent to 36 mm focal length for a 35 mm camera, contains 8 elements in 6 groups. The lens extends to working position on power-up and retracts on power-down.

The camera is retro-styled, mimicking Leica rangefinder cameras of the past and the digital Leica M9, in a substantially smaller package sized 60 mm × 124 mm × 32 mm and weighing approximately 315 grams (11.1 oz) with battery. It is equipped with a flash hot shoe and a manually operated built-in flash, although the latter has guide number of only 5, considerably smaller than that of built-in flashes of entry-level DSLRs.

Image stabilization is neither lens-based nor sensor-based, but relies on a unique method Leica developed for this camera – combining two images into one.

The Leica X1's image stabilization (combining two images into one) has the effect of improving the percentage of acceptably sharp images when taken handheld in low light at shutter speeds of 1/30 second, or slightly less if a very steady hand is used. On the other hand, those "acceptably sharp" images will show a slight blur when viewed at 100 percent, as compared to sharp images taken with the image stabilization turned off. This very slight blur is due to the unavoidable small movement of the camera as it takes the two images it needs to combine for image stabilization purposes.

As of July 13, 2010, the Leica X1 was the first compact camera to be approved by Getty Images for submissions to their image library,[1][2][3] and remained the only compact camera ever on that list, as on April 27, 2011, Getty published a revised wording of its technical requirements that no longer dictated what cameras could be used.[4]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/31/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.