Casio EX-FH100 Review

May 12, 2010 | Mark Goldstein | Rating star Rating star Rating star Rating star

Introduction

The new Casio EX-FH100 is a new high-speed, high-zoom digital compact camera, marrying a 10x ultra-wide lens with a 10 megapixel back-illuminated CMOS sensor and the ability to shoot at an amazing 40 frames per second. In addition, the EX FH100 can record high-speed movies at 1,000fps, 420fps, 240fps, 120fps, 30-240fps or 30-120fps, has a Prerecord Continuous Shutter setting that starts shooting when the shutter button is depressed halfway, and offers high-speed Night Scene, Lighting, Anti-shake and Portrait scene modes which combine several burst images into a single, clear photo. The FH100 can also shoot 720p HD movies complete with a built-in HDMI port and stereo microphone, offers Aperture/Shutter-priority and Manual shooting modes, and even supports the DNG RAW format. Available in black, the Casio EX-FH100 officially retails for £279 / $349.

Ease of Use

As with most Casio cameras that we've reviewed in the past, the EX-FH100 is an extremely well-made compact digital camera, with a stylishly sober matt-black metal body and excellent overall finish. It's just small enough to fit into the palm of your hand, despite featuring a versatile 10x optical zoom lens that's equivalent to a focal length of 24-240mm. The maximum aperture is a respectable f/3.2 at the wide end, but a slower f/5.7 at the other extreme of the zoom range. The EX-FH100 is quite slim, measuring 29mms thick when turned off, making it ideally suited to either a trouser pocket or small camera bag, and it weighs 183g without the battery or memory card fitted.

The EX-FH100 is one of the better models on the market in terms of build quality. Even the tripod mount is metal instead of plastic and is positioned centrally in-line with the lens. There's a small but useful handgrip on the front, coated in a textured plastic, making the camera easy to get to grips with. Changing cards or batteries is not possible while the FH100 is mounted on a tripod, because the compartment door hinge is too close to the tripod socket, but this is usually the case with most compacts. Otherwise this is about as good as it gets for build quality in the world of compact cameras.

The Casio EX-FH100 has relatively few external controls, just 13 in total, despite the fact that this is quite a complex camera in functionality terms, with a lot of photographic control on offer. All the controls are clearly labeled using industry-standard symbols and terminology, with just a couple of Casio-specific buttons that require a quick read of the manual. Located on top of the EX-FH100 are the lozenge-shaped On / Off button, the left and right stereo sound microphones, and a tactile Zoom Lever encircling the rather small Shutter button.

The HS Button located on top of the camera above the LCD screen toggles between Single Shot and the Continuous Shooting mode. In Single Shot mode, the Casio EX-FH100 records just 1 frame per second (at 10 megapixels), but in Continuous Shutter mode it can take up to 40 shots per second, although only at 9 megapixel resolution and only for 30 frames. The number of shots per second can be set at 40, 30, 15, 10, 7, 5, 3, 1 or auto, and you can set the total number of shots in one burst at 30, 20, 10 or 5. The Prerecord CS option saves up to 30 frames prior to the moment that the shutter button is actually pressed, helping you to avoid missing the action. Once the images have been taken, they are saved in either a Batch containing all of them, or played back at slow speed so you can select the ones that you want to keep by pressing the shutter button.

Casio EX-FH100 Casio EX-FH100
Front Rear

There's a traditional Shooting Mode Dial on top of the Casio EX-FH100, which has a positive action that doesn't get knocked out of place easily and provides quick access to the Best Shot, Auto, Aperture-Priority, Shutter-Priority and Manual modes.

Accessed via the Best shot option on the shooting mode dial, the Casio EX-FH100 offers a comprehensive range of 27 different scene modes aimed at the user who just wants to point and shoot, making this camera particularly well-suited to the beginner. There are four Best Shot scene modes that are particularly worthy of mention - High-Speed Anti-Shake, High-Speed Night Scene, High-Speed Night Scene with Portrait, and High Speed Lighting. These modes take full advantage of the Casio EX-FH100's continuous shooting speed to improve image quality in traditionally difficult shooting conditions. The camera combines a number of images taken in burst mode and aligns the position of the subject to form a single, sharp shot. Although these modes can't perform miracles, they do produce notably sharper shots when hand-holding the EX-FH100 in low-light conditions. In addition the High Speed Best Selection mode automatically selects the best image from a set of images taken in burst mode, choosing the sharpest image, and if there is a person present, the image with the subject smiling and not blinking.

Other notable Best Shot modes include Move Out CS and Move In CS, which use the Casio EX-FC100's pre-record functionality to capture a subject as it moves into or out of an adjustable frame on the LCD screen. Multi-motion Image mode automatically selects the same moving subject within a series of multiple images and combines them into a single image, effectively creating a multi-exposure shots that visually tracks the subject's movement.

In addition to the Auto and Best Shot modes, the Aperture-Priority, Shutter-Priority and Manual will prove particularly appealing to more experienced photographers looking for more control over what the camera is doing. Somewhat disappointingly there are just two f-stops available in aperture-priority, wide-open f/3.2 and stopped-down f/7.5 (depending upon the zoom setting), although the Shutter-Priority provides a full range of speeds from 30 to 1/2000 second. The Manual mode lets you set both the shutter speed and the aperture, although again there's only the same two aperture settings to choose from. The aperture is set by pressing the Set button and using the Quick Menu options on the LCD screen.

On the rear of the EX-FH100 is a large 3 inch LCD screen, with a number of controls to the right, including a traditional round navigation pad. You can directly access the various flash options by clicking down on the navigation pad, whilst up is used to toggle between the various Display modes (no information, shooting info, shooting info with histogram). The Set button in the middle performs two main tasks - it selects menu options, and also accesses the EX-FH100's Control Panel. This is a vertical list of options displayed on the right of the LCD screen, which provides quick access to some of the camera's more important options, including image size, ISO speed, white balance, and exposure compensation. This system is a good compromise given the size of the camera's LCD screen and therefore the limited space for external controls. It takes a little while to get used to the presence of this on-screen list, but you can toggle it off using the Display mode if it proves too distracting.

Casio EX-FH100 Casio EX-FH100
Front Front

Above and below the navigation pad are the self-explanatory red Camera and and green Playback buttons, which switch between the two modes. Above the camera button is the very welcome inclusion of a dedicated Movie button, which makes it quick and easy to shoot a movie without missing the start of the action. Encircling the Movie button is the Movie Mode switch, which can be set to either High Definition / Standard or High Speed Movies. Starting with the former mode, the EX-FH100 can record standard quality movies at 640x480 pixels at 30fps in the AVI format, or High Definition quality movies at 1280x720 pixels at 30fps. You can even pre-record up to 5 seconds of footage using the Prerecord Movie Best Shot mode.

There are some limitations to the EX-FH100's HD movies though. The AVI format choice results in some massive file sizes that quickly fill up your memory cards, and the length of a movie is bizarrely limited to only 10 minutes. Even worse, you can't use the optical zoom at all during movie recording (although there is a digital zoom setting available). On a more positive note, you can use the various Best Shot modes to help enhance your movies, the Anti-Shake system works for both still images and movies, and the stereo sound system is a big improvement on the usual mono option.

The High Speed Movie mode allows you to record a movie at up to an incredible 1000fps, effectively slowing down the subject movement. Six different frame rates are available - 1000 fps (224x64), 420fps (224x168), 240fps (448x336), 120fps (640x480), 30-240fps (448x336) and 30-120fps (640x480). This extreme slow-motion effect is initially very appealing and sure to impress your friends, but as with the HD movie mode, there are some drawbacks to be aware of. You can't use the optical zoom, sound isn't recorded at all, horizontal bands can appear as the lighting fluctuates, and the actual sizes of the recorded movies are pretty small, especially the 224x64 pixel, 1000fps mode.

The Menu button is positioned below the navigation pad. The menu system on the Casio EX-FH100 is perfectly straight-forward to use. Quite a lot of the camera's main settings, such as white balance, exposure compensation and ISO speed, are accessed elsewhere, so the main menu system isn't actually that complicated. A row of 3 icons along the top of the LCD screen represent the Record, Quality and Set Up sub-menus, with most of the options being the kind that you set once and then forget about. Due to the very large and bright LCD screen, the various options are easy to access and use, especially as only 6 are shown onscreen at one time.

The Casio EX-FH100 features an anti-shake system. Turn it on in the menu system and the EX-FH100 automatically compensates for camera shake, which is a slight blurring of the image that typically occurs at slow shutter speeds. There are three different modes. Camera AS uses the camera's mechanical CMOS-shift system to minimize hand movement, Image AS increases the ISO speed to minimize subject movement, and Auto uses both systems to compensate for both hand and subject movement. In practice I found that it does make a noticeable difference, as shown in the examples on the Image Quality page. You don't notice that the camera is actually doing anything different when anti-shake is turned on, just that you can use slower shutter speeds than normal and still take sharp photos. Leaving the anti-shake system on all the time didn't affect the battery-life too much, with the camera managing just over 275 shots before the rechargeable Lithium-ion battery ran out of power.

Casio EX-FH100 Casio EX-FH100
Memory Card Slot Battery Compartment

There is a single port on the right side of the Casio EX-FH100 (when viewed from the back) which accepts both the USB interface cable required to connect the camera to a printer or computer, and the AV cable. There is also a mini-HDMI port for easy connection to a HD TV set, although as with most other manufacturers Casio don't supply a suitable cable in the box. There are no controls on the left side of the EX-FH100. On the bottom are the tripod mount and lithium-ion battery compartment, which also houses the SD / SDHC memory card slot, and the speaker.

Overall the camera body feels very well-designed and not at all cluttered, despite the presence of the large 3 inch LCD, which has a wide viewing angle from left to right, average resolution of 230,000 dots, and is perfectly visible in most conditions. There is no optical viewfinder on this model. If you have never used a digital camera before, or you're upgrading from a more basic model, reading the comprehensive and fairly easy-to-follow manual before you start is a good idea. Unfortunately Casio have chosen to cut costs and only supply the full manual as a PDF on a CD, rather than in printed format. Not much use if you're taking pictures and need to find out what a particular option does.

The start-up time from turning the Casio EX-FH100 on to being ready to take a photo is not particularly quick at around 3 seconds, and it takes about the same amount of time to zoom from the widest focal length to the longest. Focusing is very quick in good light and the camera happily achieves focus indoors or in low-light situations, helped by a powerful green focus-assist lamp. It takes about 0.5 second to store an image, allowing you to keep shooting as they are being recorded onto the memory card - there is a very quick LCD blackout between each image. In Continuous mode the camera takes just 1.0 frame per second at the highest image quality, which is slow for this class of camera, although the shooting rate is at least maintained until your memory card is full. Things get much more interesting if you don't mind recording your images at 9 megapixels - then you can shoot up to an incredible 40 frames per second, as detailed above. The EX-FH100 can record both JEPG and RAW files, but it takes so long to save a single RAW file - astonishingly over 15 seconds - that you need the patience of a saint to persevere with it, as you can't use the camera until the RAW file has been saved to memory.

Once you have captured a photo, the Casio EX-FH100 has a good range of options when it comes to playing, reviewing and managing your images. You can instantly scroll through the images that you have taken, view up to 25 thumbnails onscreen at once, and zoom in and out up to 8x magnification. You can view slideshows with different effects and interval settings, edit movies and print a specific frame, adjust the white balance and brightness, and set the print order and the transfer order. You can also protect, rotate, resize, trim, and copy an image. If you've recorded a continuous burst of images, you can divide them up and edit a specific image. The Display button toggles detailed settings information about each picture on and off, such as the ISO rating and white balance, and there is a small histogram available during playback which is helpful in evaluating the exposure. A third press of the Display button shows just the image with no information displayed.

Image Quality

All of the sample images in this Review were taken using the 10 megapixel Fine JPEG setting, which gives an average image size of around 4.5Mb.

The Casio EX-FH100 produces images of good quality. The biggest issue is noise and loss of detail at relatively slow ISO speeds. The 1/2.3 inch, 10 megapixel sensor recorded noise-free images at ISO 100, but there's already some noise and slight softening of detail at ISO 200. ISO 400 shows a little more noise, loss of fine detail and significant colour desaturation, and ISO 800, 1600 and 3200 are even worse, with obvious loss of fine detail and even more noise. The Casio EX-FH100 handled chromatic aberrations well, with limited purple fringing effects appearing only in high contrast situations and generally at the edges of the frame. The built-in flash worked well indoors with good overall exposure and no red-eye. The night photograph was excellent, with the maximum shutter speed of 30 seconds being long enough for most after-dark shots. The anti-shake system works very well when hand-holding the camera in low-light conditions or when using the telephoto end of the zoom range. Macro performance is poor, only allowing you to focus as close as 7cms away from the subject. The images were a little soft straight out of the Casio EX-FH100 at the default sharpening setting and ideally require some further sharpening in an application like Adobe Photoshop, or you can change the in-camera setting.

Noise

There are 6 ISO settings available on the Casio EX-FH100. Here are some 100% crops which show the noise levels for each ISO setting.

ISO 100 (100% Crop)

ISO 200 (100% Crop)

iso100.jpg iso200.jpg
   

ISO 400 (100% Crop)

ISO 800 (100% Crop)

iso400.jpg iso800.jpg
   

ISO 1600 (100% Crop)

ISO 3200 (100% Crop)

iso1600.jpg iso3200.jpg

Focal Range

The Casio EX-FH100's 10x zoom lens provides a focal length of 24-240mm in 35mm terms, as demonstrated below.

24mm

240mm

focal_range_1.jpg focal_range_2.jpg

Sharpening

Here are two 100% crops which have been Saved as Web - Quality 50 in Photoshop. The right-hand image has had some sharpening applied in Photoshop. The out-of-the camera images are a little soft at the default sharpening setting and benefit from some further sharpening in a program like Adobe Photoshop. You can also change the in-camera sharpening level to suit your tastes.

Original (100% Crop)

Sharpened (100% Crop)

sharpen1.jpg sharpen1a.jpg
   
sharpen2.jpg sharpen2a.jpg

File Quality

The Casio EX-FH100 has 3 different image quality settings available, with Fine being the highest quality option. Here are some 100% crops which show the quality of the various options, with the file size shown in brackets.

10M Fine (4.3Mb) (100% Crop) 10M Normal (2.2Mb) (100% Crop)
quality_fine.jpg quality_normal.jpg
   
10M Economy (1.5Mb) (100% Crop)  
quality_economy.jpg  

Chromatic Aberrations

The Casio EX-FH100 handled chromatic aberrations well during the review, with some limited purple fringing present around the edges of objects in certain high-contrast situations, as shown in the example below.

Example 1 (100% Crop)

Example 2 (100% Crop)

chromatic1.jpg chromatic2.jpg

Macro

The Casio EX-FH100 offers a Macro setting that allows you to focus on a subject that is 7cms away from the camera when the lens is set to wide-angle. The first image shows how close you can get to the subject (in this case a compact flash card). The second image is a 100% crop.

Macro Shot

100% Crop

macro1.jpg macro1a.jpg

Flash

The flash settings on the Casio EX-FH100 are Auto, Flash Off, Flash On, and Red Eye Reduction. These shots of a white coloured wall were taken at a distance of 1.5m.

Flash Off - Wide Angle (24mm)

Flash On - Wide Angle (24mm)

ISO 64 ISO 64
   

Flash Off - Telephoto (240mm)

Flash On - Telephoto (240mm)

ISO 64 ISO 64

And here are some portrait shots. As you can see, neither the Flash On or the Red-eye reduction settings caused any amount of red-eye.

Flash On

Flash On (100% Crop)
flash_on.jpg flash_on1.jpg
   

Red Eye Reduction

Red Eye Reduction (100% Crop)

flash_redeye.jpg flash_redeye1.jpg

Night

The Casio EX-FH100's maximum shutter speed is 30 seconds, which is excellent news if you're seriously interested in night photography. The shot below was taken using a shutter speed of 2 seconds at ISO 100.

Night Shot

Night Shot (100% Crop)

night1.jpg night1a.jpg

Anti Shake

The Casio EX-FH100 has an anti-shake mechanism, which allows you to take sharp photos at slower shutter speeds than other digital cameras. To test this, I took 2 handheld shots of the same subject with the same settings. The first shot was taken with anti shake turned off, the second with it turned on. Here are some 100% crops of the images to show the results. As you can see, with anti shake turned on, the images are much sharper than with anti shake turned off. This feature really does seem to make a difference and could mean capturing a successful, sharp shot or missing the opportunity altogether.

Shutter Speed / Focal Length

Anti Shake Off (100% Crop)

Anti Shake On (100% Crop)

1/20th / 24mm antishake1.jpg antishake1a.jpg
1/8th / 240mm antishake2.jpg antishake2a.jpg

High-Speed Modes

The Casio EX-FH100 has some different High Speed scene modes which combine several burst images into a single, clear photo. They do create sharper, clearer hand-held pictures, but at the expense of a noticeable loss of fine detail.

Lighting

Lighting (100% Crop)

high_speed_lighting.jpg high_speed_lighting1.jpg
   

Night Scene

Night Scene (100% Crop)

high_speed_night.jpg high_speed_night1.jpg
   

Anti Shake

Anti Shake (100% Crop)

high_speed_antishake.jpg high_speed_antishake1.jpg

Sample Images

This is a selection of sample images from the Casio EX-FH100 camera, which were all taken using the 10 megapixel Fine JPEG setting. The thumbnails below link to the full-sized versions, which have not been altered in any way.

Sample RAW Images

The Casio EX-FH100 enables users to capture RAW and JPEG format files. We've provided some Casio RAW (DNG) samples for you to download (thumbnail images shown below are not 100% representative).

Sample Movie & Video

This is a sample movie at the highest quality setting of 1280x720 pixels at 30 frames per second. Please note that this 15 second movie is 56Mb in size.

Product Images

Casio EX-FH100

Front of the Camera

 
Casio EX-FH100

Front of the Camera / Lens Extended

 
Casio EX-FH100

Isometric View

 
Casio EX-FH100

Isometric View

 
Casio EX-FH100

Rear of the Camera

 
Casio EX-FH100

Rear of the Camera / Image Displayed

 
Casio EX-FH100

Rear of the Camera / Turned On

 
Casio EX-FH100

Rear of the Camera / Main Menu

 
Casio EX-FH100

Top of the Camera

 

Casio EX-FH100

Bottom of the Camera

 
Casio EX-FH100

Side of the Camera

 
Casio EX-FH100

Side of the Camera

 
Casio EX-FH100

Front of the Camera

 
Casio EX-FH100

Front of the Camera

 
Casio EX-FH100

Memory Card Slot

 
Casio EX-FH100

Battery Compartment

Conclusion

The Casio EX-FH100 is a natural evolution of last year's EX-FC100 model, bringing together Casio's still-unique high-speed shooting options with an appealingly wide-angle 24mm, 10x zoom lens. With a multitude of different shooting options on offer, the FH100 is rather intimidating for beginners, while the poor range of apertures, noisy images and painfully slow RAW format rather limit its appeal for keen photographers.

The FH100 is obviously a great camera for capturing fast-moving subjects and helping you not to miss that decisive moment, with an almost overwhelming array of different options and shooting modes on offer. The ability to take 40 images in one second at the touch of a button is amazing for any camera, DSLR or compact, and if you can't choose the best shot, then the EX-FH100 can do that for you too. The only slight downsides are the small reduction in resolution to 9 megapixels, which applies to all of this camera's high-speed still image functions, and the fact that you can actually only record 30 images at that headline-grabbing 40fps.

Unfortunately the image quality doesn't quite match the extensive feature list, with the EX-FH100 suffering from less than stellar images in low-light due to obvious noise and softening of fine detail at the relatively slow speed of ISO 200, which gets progressively worse as you move up the range. Which is a shame, as apart from the disappointing 7cm macro mode, image quality is otherwise very good.

On the video side, the EX-FH100 can record both 720p HD and up to 1000fps super slow-motion movies, although both modes are somewhat hampered by huge file sizes, the inability to optically zoom, and in the case of slow-motion, drastically reduced image resolutions. Still, having all of this functionality in such a compact and well-built camera clearly puts the Casio EX-FH100 at the head of the action pack.

The Casio EX-FH100 also benefits from being a second-generation product in terms of price, costing a much more attractive £279 / $349, some £70 / $50 less than last year's EX-FC100 for what is a better-speccified camera. It's still not cheap, but it does mean that the FH100 compares quite well to its main travel-zoom rivals, offering a very different proposition for a similar price. If you take a lot of pictures of fast-moving subjects - sports, animals, even your small children - then the Casio EX-FH100 certainly makes a lot of sense.

4 stars

Ratings (out of 5)
Design 4.5
Features 5
Ease-of-use 4
Image quality 4
Value for money 4

Specifications

Number of Effective Pixels 10.10 million
Image Sensor   1/2.3-inch high-speed CMOS (back-illuminated type)
Total Pixels 10.62 million
File Format Still Images RAW (DNG*1), JPEG (Exif Version 2.2, DCF 1.0 standard, DPOF compliant)
Movies AVI format, Motion JPEG, IMA-ADPCM (stereo)
Built-in Flash Memory (Image Area) 85.9 MB
Recording Media SDHC Memory Card, SD Memory Card*2
Number of Recorded Pixels Still Images RAW, 10M (3648 x 2736), 3:2 (3648 x 2432), 16:9 (3648 x 2048), 9M (3456 x 2592), 7M (3072 x 2304), 4M (2304 x 1728), 2M (1600 x 1200), VGA (640 x 480)
Hi-speed Movies (HS) 224 x 64 (1000 fps), 224 x 168 (420 fps), 448 x 336 (240 fps), 640 x 480 (120 fps), 448 x 336 (30-240 fps), 640 x 480 (30-120 fps)
HD Movies 1280 x 720 (30 fps)
STD Movies 640 x 480 (30 fps)
High-speed Continuous Shutter 40 fps, 30 fps, 15 fps, 10 fps, 7 fps, 5 fps, 3 fps, 1 fps (Maximum image size: 3456 x 2592 pixels, maximum continuous shutter shots: up to 30 shots)
Lens (Still Image) Construction 11 lenses in 10 groups, including aspherical lens
F-number F3.2 (W) to F5.7 (T)
Focal Length   f = 4.3 to 43.0mm
35mm Film Equivalent Approx. 24 to 240mm
Zoom Optical Zoom 10X
Digital Zoom 4X (40X in combination with optical zoom)
HD Zoom 57.0X (image size: 640 x 480 pixels)
Focusing Focus Type Contrast Detection Auto Focus
Focus Modes Auto Focus, Macro Mode, Infinity Mode, Manual Focus
AF Area Spot, Multi, Free, Tracking
AF Assist Lamp Yes
Focus Range*3 (From Lens Surface) Auto Focus Approx. 15cm to infinity (W)
Macro Approx. 7cm to 50cm (First step from widest setting)
Infinity Mode Infinity (W)
Manual Focus Approx. 15cm to infinity (W)
Exposure Exposure Metering Multi-pattern, center weighted, spot by imaging element
Exposure Control Program AE, Aperture Priority AE, Shutter Speed Priority AE, Manual Exposure
Exposure Compensation -2EV to +2EV (in 1/3EV steps)
Shutter Type   CMOS electronic shutter, mechanical shutter
Shutter Speed*4 Auto 1 to 1/2000 second
Aperture Priority AE 1 to 1/2000 second
Shutter Speed Priority AE 30 to 1/2000 second (high-speed continuous shutter: up to 1/40000 second)
Manual Exposure 30 to 1/2000 second (high-speed continuous shutter: up to 1/40000 second)
Aperture*3   F3.2 (W) to F7.5 (W)*5
Aperture Priority AE/Manual Exposure
White Balance Auto WB, Daylight, Overcast, Shade, Day White FL, Daylight FL, Tungsten, Manual WB
Sensitivity (SOS)*6 Still Images Auto, ISO100, ISO200, ISO400, ISO800, ISO1600, ISO3200
Movies Auto (Manual Exposure mode: ISO100, ISO200, ISO400, ISO800, ISO1600, ISO3200)
Other Recording Functions Image Stabilization Mechanism CMOS-shift image stabilization
Prerecord Continuous Shutter*7 Yes
BEST SHOT High-speed Continuous Shutter BS*7 Expression, Baby, Child, Pet, Sports
High-speed Movie BS*7 Child, Pet, Sports
High-speed Night Scene and Portrait*7 Yes
High-speed Night Scene*7 Yes
High-speed Lighting*7 Yes
High-speed Anti Shake*7 Yes
High-speed Best Selection*7 Yes
Lag Correction*7 Yes
Multi-motion Image*7 Yes
Move Out Continuous Shutter*9 Yes
Move In Continuous Shutter*7 Yes
YouTube™ Capture Mode*7 Yes
Face Detection Yes
Self-timer*8 10 seconds, 2 seconds, Triple Self-timer
Built-in Flash Flash Modes Auto, Flash Off, Flash On, Red Eye Reduction
Monitor Screen 3.0-inch TFT color LCD (Super Clear LCD), 230,400 dots (960 x 240)
Timekeeping Functions Date and Time Recorded with image data
On-image Time Stamp Function Yes
Auto Calendar To 2049
World Time 162 cities in 32 time zones, city name, date, time, daylight saving time
Input/Output Terminals   USB/AV port, HDMI output (Mini)
USB Hi-Speed USB
Microphone Stereo
Speaker Monaural
Power Requirements Rechargeable lithium ion battery (NP-90) x 1
Battery Life (CIPA Standards) Approx. 300 shots
Dimensions (CIPA Standards) 105.0 (W) x 63.2 (H) x 29.9 (D) mm, 29.0mm thick excluding protruding parts
Weight (CIPA Standards) Approx. 227 g (including battery and memory card), approx. 183 g (excluding battery and memory card)
Bundled Accessories Rechargeable lithium ion battery, lithium ion battery charger, AC power cord, USB cable, AV cable, strap, CD-ROM

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