My 'OMG EOS-M just £199' one week in review

If you fancied a Canon EOS-M when it first came out in the UK just 2 years ago, you'd have forked out a hefty £770.

From launch, the EOS reviews were very mixed - the lenses were really great, the feature set good, the IQ decent, but the focusing time absolutely shocking. As a result, it totally slipped off the radar and last week I bought one for £199 at Argos (it came with an 18-55 STM kit lens, and Speedlite 90EX).

In recent months Canon have launched the M2 but not in Europe, and released new firmware that dramatically speeds up the autofocus. I've now had the chance to use one for a week or so and here are my initial thoughts.

POSITIVES

+ From a sensor and IQ perspective it's exactly the same as my 650d, which is a great little camera
+ Touch screen - takes some getting used to but it's brilliant when you do. I still maintain that even the pro-level cameras will have touch within the next 4 years.
+ It's absolutely tiny. Just look at it.
+ Despit its size with a £30 adaptor from Amazon I can use it with every single one of my normal Canon lenses (it looks a little odd with a 70-300L on it). It's like a spare Canon body that's no bigger than a wallet.
+ The lenses are really great, but due to the poor initial sales you can pick them up for a song. I got the awesome 22mm f/2 STM lens for just £75 brand new on Ebay. It sold for £230 just 2 years ago.
+ The build quality is great - all metal with a beautiful finish
+ It's £200 for an 18mb 'mini SLR'!

NEGATIVES

- Oh god, it's horrible not having an optical viewfinder. The LCD screen is great, and I'm sure I'll get used to it but it just feels wrong and I feel out of control
- Even if the AF is zipped up it's still slower than you'd like.
- There's no way on earth you could describe this as a primary camera for an enthusiast. It's got far too many quirks and frustrations.
- Battery life's not great (though again you can pick up spare batteries cheap on ebay)
- It's hit or miss - whilst in theory you can get great shots, you need patience or for the shots to not be critical if you miss them.

In general, my views are that this is one hell of a Marmite camera. There are times when I absolutely love it and think it's the coolest thing ever. Times when I want to throw it into a ditch.

However after a week of using it I've decided that - for ME and what I do - it's going to be a hell of a lot of fun. It's so blooming tiny I really can take it anywhere. If I'm going out for a long cycle I can shove it in a small saddlebag - I'd never dream of taking my 6d or 100x in circumstances like that. Even if I take my whole 'kit' (camera, 18-55, 22mm f2, flash) I'd struggle to make it take up more space than a large book. And if you want to take a tripod with you, you only need the smallest size Gorillapod.

In short, I'll find myself in places I'd never normally have that 'level' of camera just because it's so portable and because being small and relatively inexpensive you'll use it in places where you wouldn't wave your DSLR about (sandy beaches etc). I'll miss a lot of shots, and I find the absence of viewfinder really frustrating, but at the end of the day I'll get shots I wouldn't have got.

Also, if you stick Magic Lantern (a free 3rd party firmware on it) it's absolutely amazing for video. 4k raw footage, with stepper lenses for smooth focusing. It's a better video camera than some of the specialist kit we use at work that costs 3x the price.

The other interesting fact for me is that the lenses are really great, but the prices are so low because of low demand. If Canon make an EOS-M3 (and I'm sure they will) then those prices will skyrocket again.

So - in short - consider with care. It's not for everyone. On the plus side, it's so small that if you do end up kicking it into a ditch you're unlikely hurt your toe.

(Please note, the images below aren't particularly illustrative or good - they're just a selection of samples intended to show bokeh, general IQ and the benefits of having full shutter control etc.)

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I agree w/the overall review. For me, it was a matter of not being able to carry 2 SLR bodies around my neck; even one is a challenge now. I considered many point and shoots, micro 4/3, etc, but did not want to compromise on the sensor size/noise level. I got the M when it went on sale a year and a half ago for 299.00 USD.

I am also frustrated at times with not having either an optical VF or EVF. I would like a pop up flash, but bought a cheap,tiny Canon compat. sunpak. The M's battery life is really poor, so I carry an extra. I wish I could set in-between ISO's like on my 60D. Those are the negatives. As the OP stated, the compactness can't be beat and the IQ is pretty much the same as the Canon DSLRS w/ 1.6 sensor. The menus are also similar to the DSLR's and that's a plus, as I'd rather not start w/another system to learn..

When I see the Sony NEX cameras, and some others like Samung, Fuji, etc I am tempted, but am not willing to make a major investment in body and lens. I have the 18-55 IS and it's very sharp as is the pancake. Am consdering the Tamron 18-200-M if and when the price comes down(a lot) from 499.00.

If an M (xx) comes out w/an EVF option/pop up flash etc, I'd consider it, but am ok for now w/the M as a backup/ walkaround. I hope they don't ignore the USA market. If it was a stronger camera, they'd get 600.00 for it, they made a mistake and had to cut it in half to sell it to people like me.
 
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Mar 25, 2011
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Is Canon still selling the "M" in Europe, or are the ones being sold so cheap gray market models imported from Asia?

I really doubt if Canon is going to start selling them again in the USA after taking the huge losses on the first models. They did a lot of market research and found that average buyers in the USA and Europe believe that the large DSLR's will take better photos, and will not pay $500 or more for a tiny camera. Canon makes their profits by selling huge volumes of product, and ended up dumping most of their production.
 
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Jul 26, 2011
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I went through the same stages. Would have never purchased it for the original price. When it went on its big sale here, I got one. Was really impressed in the beginning. Later I realized that the AF is just too slow still. It's a very nice camera, but when I lose a good shot because the AF just doesn't hack an average situation, then I have to rethink my strategy. Once Canon announced they would basically discontinue the system, I gave up on it.
I did get a SL1 when it was on sale here on Amazon.com, and that one I fell in love with. Yes, it's still a little bigger than a M, but the AF works great, picture quality is better, I can assign the focus to the back button, it takes all my crop lenses without adapter, it's like a little 7D. I still use that one all the time.
 
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michi said:
Later I realized that the AF is just too slow still. It's a very nice camera, but when I lose a good shot because the AF just doesn't hack an average situation, then I have to rethink my strategy.

Don't blame the camera for your deficiencies! The thing works just fine, all YOU have to do is to use it for what it is meant to be! I am sure you are one of those people who were whining because the ipad didn't have a keyboard and stuff :mad: :mad:

Sad really!
 
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michi said:
I did get a SL1 when it was on sale here on Amazon.com, and that one I fell in love with. Yes, it's still a little bigger than a M, but the AF works great, picture quality is better, I can assign the focus to the back button, it takes all my crop lenses without adapter, it's like a little 7D. I still use that one all the time.

+1 on the SL1. I use one too and it's a wonderful small camera. Light weight. Easy to use. Good AF. Excellent image quality. Works with any Canon EF & EFS lens.

The EOS M would be much more interesting if it had a built-in EVF (not just the LCD) and fast autofocus, sort of like the Olympus E-M1.
 
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Straightshooter said:
michi said:
Later I realized that the AF is just too slow still. It's a very nice camera, but when I lose a good shot because the AF just doesn't hack an average situation, then I have to rethink my strategy.

Don't blame the camera for your deficiencies! The thing works just fine, all YOU have to do is to use it for what it is meant to be! I am sure you are one of those people who were whining because the ipad didn't have a keyboard and stuff :mad: :mad:

Sad really!

I disagree. Slow AF is not "just fine". Blame the camera.
 
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