Battery NB-4L Replacement For Canon Camera Canon IXUS40 55 70 75 80 SD400 SD600 i200M i7

Find the right battery for Canon IXUS40 55 70 75 80 SD400 SD600 i200M i7 to solve your power issues. Our Canon NB-4L batteries are manufactured to precisely fit just as your original battery.

We use the highest quality Li-ion cells and components that are lighter weight, charge faster and last longer.

US Canon battery shop – Tech-Battery.com ! Shopping with us is safe and secure! 100% Guarantee Quality and Fully Test!

Canon NB-4L Battery For Canon – Battery For Canon Camera Li-ion 760mAh 3.7V. Browse our various categories and find out why we have been the go-to source for our customers.

NB-4L
  • Chemistry: Li-ion
  • Voltage: 760mAh
  • Capacity: 3.7V

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What’s the total delivery time? (please use this formula to determine when your order will arrive) total delivery time = packaging time + shipping time.

Replaces the following products:

Fits the following devices:

Canon IXUS40 55 70 75 80 SD400 SD600 i200M i7

Canon NB-4L Canon battery is replacement for Canon IXUS40 55 70 75 80 SD400 SD600 i200M i7. The NB-4L batteries equivalent is guaranteed to meet or exceed Canon original specifications. All Canon NB-4L Battery are brand new, 1 year Warranty, 100% Guarantee Quality and Fully Test!

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Canon NB-4L Canon Batteries

  • 100% OEM Compatible with your Canon Camera.
  • Lithium Ion battery technology
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  • Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back
  • 1 Year Warranty on all Canon Camera Replacement Batteries

6 tips to increase NB-4L Canon Battery lifetime

The performance of your Canon depends largely on the performance of your battery. And his time of life depends on its users, and that you are. These are the principles that have guided the Canon , at the head, so you can optimize the performance of Canon Camera battery.
New battery still fully charged NB-4L sold. You must be on the first wheel to be conditioned for optimum performance. Loading and unloading of the battery 4 or 5 times is enough to determine.
The memory effect completely to avoid a full charge and discharge the battery, Canon NB-4L twice a month.
The dirt on the Canon NB-4L contacts of the battery can power the Canon Camera batteries. Clean with alcohol and cotton can look like and function like new.
This method is recommended for those using the AC adapter for long periods. We recommend that you use the Canon NB-4L battery at least once in two weeks. Batteries lose its charge when stored for a long time and you need the battery if it does break.
If he does not use a length of time, the Canon NB-4L battery will be stored protected from a clean, dry and cool, heat and other metals. A loss of business to charge the battery in time and need a break before reuse.
Power Management Features Battery NB-4L enable the conservation of energy in the battery of Canon Camera. You can control the speed of the processor off, or you can adjust the brightness of the LCD screen to a minimum to ensure low power consumption. 

Why we have been the go-to source for our customers ?

We stock a wide range of rechargeable batteries for Canon Camera. Your Canon Tablet PC is part of your everyday life. Successful communications on a Canon begin with your battery. When purchasing a replacement battery for your Canon Canon, dependability and price are what we have to offer. We’ve been supplying reliable, high quality Canon batteries for over 10 years. Our goal is to provide high quality aftermarket replacement batteries at a very reasonable price. All of our rechargeable Li-Ion Canon batteries are backed by a one year warranty.

What is the run time of Canon battery?

Canon batteries have two main ratings on them: Volts and Amperes. Because size and weight of batteries is limited when compared to larger batteries such as car batteries, most companies show their ratings with Volts and Milliamperes. One thousand Milliamperes equals 1 Ampere. When buying a battery, select batteries with the most Milliamperes (or mAh). Batteries are also rated by Watt-Hours, perhaps the simplest rating of all. This is found by multiplying the Volts and the Amperes together. For example:

  • 14.4 Volts, 4000mAh (Note: 4000mAh is equal to 4.0 Amperes).
  • 14.4 x 4.0 = 57.60 Watt-Hours

Watt-Hours signifies the energy needed to power one watt for one hour.

Canon’s PowerShot Zoom is like a pocket telescope that takes photos

Canon has announced the PowerShot Zoom, an unusual camera that’s more like a digital monocular than a point-and-shoot. The company has been showing off the idea for a while and recently crowdfunded it in Japan; now it’s coming to the US.

The PowerShot Zoom is a tiny device with an electronic viewfinder, a 1/3-inch 12-megapixel sensor, and two switchable equivalent focal lengths of 100mm and 400mm with a digital zoom up to 800mm. The lens is f/5.6-6.3, so this probably isn’t well-suited to low-light use. Image quality in general is not really the focus.

Canon says the product has been designed for people who enjoy outdoor activities like birdwatching and hiking, however, and it could be a useful accessory for spectators at sports events like the Olympic Games — if they actually go ahead. The camera charges over USB-C and saves images and video to a microSD card, plus you can transfer images to a smartphone over Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.

The PowerShot Zoom will go on sale in the US late next month for $299.99.

Testing Canon’s Animal Eye AF on the New EOS R5

One of the features that Canon mentioned in passing when it revealed the EOS R5 and R6 was the addition of Animal Eye AF. Combined with the new and improved Dual Pixel CMOS AF II, the feature should work pretty well, but now we have our first real-world tests that actually show it in action.

The video clips below, uploaded by YouTube user Marcus C and shared initially by Canon Watch, show how a pre-production Canon EOS R5 performs when photographing animals using the new and improved Animal Eye AF.

The EOS R5 press release from Canon offered the following footnote about the feature:

[i] Effectiveness varies depending on the subject. In some cases, dogs, cats or birds may not be detected, while some animals other than dogs, cats or birds may be detected

As you can see in the videos below, this plays out pretty accurately in real world use. Animal AF works pretty well on most subjects—though it does lose track in some cases—and seems to work far beyond the “dogs, cats, and even birds,” that Canon emphasized in the original announcement.

Scroll down to see all three videos. The first covers cats and dogs, the second is dedicated to birds, and the third covers various other animals like turtles, fish, and monkeys at the zoo:

Some photographers question the usefulness of Animal Eye AF or Animal Detection AF—also found in some Sony, Nikon, and Panasonic cameras—seeing it as something of a gimmick that is only really useful for a select niche of photographers. But for that niche, the option to lock on to an animal’s eye automatically can only be a positive.

If it can also help you capture better pet portraits of your dog or cat at home, all the better.

Canon Has ‘Moved On to HEIF,’ But Won’t Ditch JPEG Completely… Yet

A report by Digital Camera World earlier this week initially claimed that Canon was ditching JPEGs, replacing them with 10-bit HEIF files in the upcoming Canon 1D X Mark III, and possibly beyond. And while Canon eventually clarified that they are not getting rid of JEPG, the format may be (ought to be?) on its last legs.

The so-called “High Efficiency Image File Format” is a more efficient image format based on “High Efficiency Video Compression” or H.265. It rose to industry prominence in 2017 when Apple actually did ditch JPEG in favor of HEIC—the file name Apple uses for HEIF images captured by iPhones—because the format allows you to store twice the data as JPEG without increasing the file size. Additionally, HEIF supports up to 16-bit color, whereas all JPEGs are 8-bit.

Which brings us back to Canon.

The DCW report drew an understandable conclusion based on a statement by Canon UK product intelligence specialist David Parry, who said that Canon had “moved on to HEIF files” during a 1D X Mark III product briefing.

Once the news started gaining traction, Canon clarified that they “have no plans to abandon JPEGs just give users a new image option,” but this begs the question: why would someone shoot 8-bit JPEGs when they could capture more data at a similar file size with a 10-bit HEIF?

Google ran into this head-on earlier this month, when it was discovered that the iPhone’s original resolution HEIC files were so small they were getting around Google Photos’ limited storage parameters, allowing iPhone users to store unlimited full-resolution files on the service for free—a feature that was “exclusive” to Pixel users, and that Google was quietly doing away with.

DCW’s James Artaius drew the same conclusion after hearing from Canon that JPEG would still be around. Thanks to Apple, the format has enjoyed widespread adoption by developers for both Windows and Mac, so there are no longer any major compatibility issues. In Artaius’ own words, “with JPG being made quite redundant by HEIF, there is little practical point in actually using it.”

We would love to see this technology adopted by other brands, and wouldn’t be surprised if that happens sooner rather than later. Apple got the ball rolling two years ago, and now that the world’s largest camera company is embracing HEIF, we can only hope that it will be the format that JPEG 2000 and Google’s WEBP and every other “JPEG-killer” never quite managed to become.

Canon creating even smaller mirrorless cameras, new patent reveals

Canon’s new EOS M6 Mark II is a portable powerhouse: it fits easily into any bag, making it an ideal traveling companion. In fact, even the company’s EOS RP full-frame mirrorless snapper (pictured above) is small and light, despite its large lens mount.

However, Canon seems to think it’s possible to shrink the size of its mirrorless cameras even further, if its latest patent application is anything to go by.

Filed in Japan, the patent describes “a technique for suppressing an increase in the size of an image pickup apparatus due to the arrangement of a motor for driving a shutter”. 

In other words, as Canon News points out, if the shutter motor is moved from its current position next to the battery compartment on the EOS RP to under the shutter assembly (position 405 in the diagram below), it might allow the camera maker to design a smaller body.

Going by the diagrams in the patent, particularly the size of the lens mount, the design idea seems to be for a new full-frame mirrorless snapper, although the same concept could be applied to Canon’s APS-C mirrorless cameras as well.

While a lighter, more compact interchangeable lens camera (ILC) will make many travel photographers happy, how a smaller body will be able to handle larger lenses – like the brand-new RF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS USM – remains to be seen. That said, if Canon could design some pancake prime lenses with wide apertures of f/1.4 or f/2.8, the company may well win back some customers.

Canon is Working on a 5D Mark V, May Arrive at the End of 2020: Report

If you’re worried that the launch of the EOS R and the creation of the RF mount meant Canon is giving up on its DSLRs entirely, we have some good news for you: it seems Canon is still planning to keep updating its DLSR lineup… for now.

A source who is familiar with the latest internal Canon camera roadmap tells Canon Rumors that there is in fact a Canon 5D Mark V in the works, in addition to the expected EOS R Mark II.

The source didn’t reveal any timing or other details, but it’s likely these cameras will share a sensor and many of the same specs. Early adopters of Canon’s full-frame mirrorless RF mount will be able to step up to the EOS R Mark II, while full-frame DSLR users who don’t want to give up their OVF or use an adapter with their EF-mount glass will get at least one more 5D upgrade.

Don’t get excited just yet though: CR doesn’t expect either camera to be officially announced until Q4 of 2020.