Canon EOS-1V

Canon EOS-1V
The Canon EOS-1v with EF 50 mm f/1.8 II lens
Overview
Maker Canon
Type 35mm SLR
Released March 2000
Production 2000-2018
Intro price 270,000¥
Lens
Lens mount Canon EF lens mount
Focusing
Focus TTL Phase Detection Autofocus (45 zone)
Exposure/metering
Exposure TTL max. aperture metering with 21-zone
Evaluative metering
Partial metering
Centre spot metering
Focusing point-linked spot metering
Multi-spot metering
Flash
Flash None
Shutter
Frame rate 4 frame/s, 10 frame/s with PB-E2
General
Dimensions 161 x 120.8 x 70.8 mm, 945 g without battery nor film; 1380 g with PB-E2 grip but still without battery nor film
Chronology
Replaced Canon EOS-1N
Successor Canon EOS-1D, Canon EOS-1Ds

The Canon EOS-1V is a 35mm single-lens reflex camera from Canon's EOS series, released in 2000. The body design formed the basis for Canon's subsequent Canon EOS-1D and EOS-1Ds families of digital SLRs. The 1V was the last model of Canon professional film cameras before it was discontinued on May 30, 2018.

Canon used the suffix 'v' because the camera introduced the fifth generation of Canon professional SLRs, after the Canon F-1 and New F-1, the Canon T90, and earlier EOS 1 models; Canon also stated that the 'v' stands for "vision".

The EOS 1V was the fastest moving-mirror film camera ever put into production at the time it was introduced, at 10 frames/second with the PB-E2 power drive booster and the NP-E2 Ni-MH battery pack. (Although the 1nRS has a higher frame rate, it used a fixed pellicle mirror rather than a moving mirror). Only the latest professional digital cameras are faster, for example the Canon EOS-1D X Mark II with 16fps.