Averaging about 3 frames per second, the Canon EOS 70D can just keep shooting JPEGs as long as you hold the shutter button down. Low speed mode is good for when you don't want to capture quite as many frames, but still want to be ready for mild action, as when children are your subjects, without filling the card quite so fast. You can capture about 11 Raw images and 17 JPEGs in high-speed mode (see the tables below for more). Our tests show its fastest rate to be about 7.5 fps, which makes sense when you consider there's less processing involved than when the camera has to compress and save a JPEG. The EOS 70D can fire at up to 7 frames per second, an improvement over the 60D's 5.3 fps, and even the 50D's 6.3 fps, but it's still slightly slower than the EOS 7D's 8 fps. When special modes like HDR and Handheld Night Scene are active there is more delay for processing, but it's not too bad, again especially with a fast card. Especially when using a fast card, the Canon EOS 70D is very responsive, even when shooting action. The Canon EOS 70D responds quickly to input, with fast menus that remember where you were for easy readjustment of controls, and the My Menu tab lets you put your oft-used controls in one place for faster access. Autofocus, as we've mentioned, is faster in both live view and traditional phase when the AF area is confined to either a single point or a smaller cluster. Startup is as fast as it should be, with Canon claiming 0.15 second, which looks about right to us. As is typical of SLRs, the Canon EOS 70D is quite responsive, from startup to autofocus, and now including autofocus in live view.
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