Canon EOS 30V
{{Short description|35mm single-lens reflex camera}}
{{Infobox camera | camera_name = Canon EOS 30V/33V [ELAN 7NE/7N]
| image = Eos_30v-1-weba.jpg
| lens_mount = Canon EF lens mount
| maker = Canon
| date = 2004
| production = 2004-2007
| sensor_type = Film
| focus = TTL Phase Detection Autofocus (7 zone)
| exposure = PASM autoexposure
35 zone evaluative metering
| flash = Built-in flash and E-TTL II flash metering with shoe mounted flash
| frame-rate = 4 frame/s
| dimensions = 146.7 x 103 x 69 mm, 580g
}}
The EOS 7s / 30V / ELAN 7NE (Japanese/Asia-Pacific European/North American product names) and the EOS 33V / ELAN 7N (Asia-Pacific Europe/North America){{cite web |url=http://global.canon/en/c-museum/product/film245.html |title=EOS ELAN 7NE / EOS ELAN 7N |website=Canon Camera Museum}} are 35 mm film single-lens reflex cameras from Canon of Japan, launched in April 2004. The 7s/30V/ELAN 7NE employ Canon's Eye Controlled Focus mechanism while the 33V/ELAN 7N do not. These cameras were the replacements for the earlier EOS 30/33 model.
Perhaps the most important upgrade{{cite web
|first = Peter Kun
|last = Frary
|url = http://emedia.leeward.hawaii.edu/Frary/canon_elan7ne.htm
|title = Canon EOS ELAN 7NE
|year = 2006
|access-date = 2008-03-07
|archive-url = https://archive.today/20121212025210/http://emedia.leeward.hawaii.edu/Frary/canon_elan7ne.htm
|archive-date = 2012-12-12
|url-status = dead
}}
compared to the EOS 30/33 was the flash metering; this was the first film camera to support Canon's new E-TTL II flash metering system with compatible EX-series external flashes. The autofocus system received a mild upgrade from the earlier model and is equivalent to the system in the contemporaneous EOS 10D.{{cite web
|last = Trzoniec
|first = Stan
|title = Canon's EOS ELAN 7NE: A New 35mm Film SLR
|url = http://www.shutterbug.com/content/canons-eos-elan-7nebra-new-35mm-film-slr
|date=December 2004
|publisher = Shutterbug
|accessdate = 2012-10-09
}}
A minor but significant improvement was a backlight for the LCD on the upper panel, allowing the camera's settings to be viewed without a flashlight at night. Other changes included raised letters and symbols on the camera's controls, and a changed external finish.