Casio EX-FH25 Review

August 9, 2010 | Gavin Stoker | Rating star Rating star Rating star Half rating star

Introduction

The Casio EX-FH25 is a new ultra-zoom digital camera, sporting a 20x lens that provides a focal range of 26-520mm and offers sensor-shift image stabilisation to keep things steady. Also onboard the FH25 are a high-speed, high-sensitivity 10-megapixel CMOS sensor, 30 frames per second continuous shooting at 9 megapixels, a special pre-record mode which starts the recording as soon as the shutter is half pressed, and high-speed film recording up to 1000fps. In-camera exposure blending, High-speed Anti Shake and High-speed Night Mode are on-hand to help you make the most of the camera's capabilities. The Casio EX-FH25 is available now for a recommended price of £399 / $399 / €399.

Ease of Use

Like Fujifilm's heavyweight HS10 super zoom, Casio's equally DSLR-styled but more obviously plastic-y Exilim EX-FH25 marries a modest sounding but plentiful 10.1-megapixel effective resolution from a back-lit 1/2.3-inch CMOS sensor (wires don't get in the way, therefore sensitivity's maximised) to a whopper of a lens.

Granted, it's a little less pulse quickening when placed in direct comparison with the Fujifilm (or Olympus' SP-800UZ) - Casio's 'cannon' a image stabilized 20x rather than 30x - but still knocks a 3x or 5x pocket model into a cocked hat. The broad focal range on offer here is equivalent to 26-520mmm in 35mm film terms, once again allowing for any subject from dramatic landscape to candid close up to be captured, and is supported by sensor shift anti shake to avoid the blurring effects of hand wobble - effective up to a point. Given that the HS10 also costs an identical £399.99, the EX-FH25's asking price at first appears a tad high - particularly as, and the same is true of both cameras, one could purchase an entry level DSLR instead for an identical outlay.

The story of the EX-FH25 is not just one of optics however. This being a Casio bridge model, speed of operation is always going to be at the forefront of the spec, even if the end results are not wholly convincing - and here that's been extended to its video capabilities. Blazing away with a frame rate of up to 1,000 fps, albeit at a low 224x64 pixels, movies can be captured and replayed in ultra slow motion, suggesting that when coupled with its extreme telephoto setting, the EX-FH25 might be an ideal tool for shooting action or sporting events.

Of course you can still opt for now regulation issue 1280x720 pixels 30fps HD video with mono sound and in widely compatible Motion JPEG AVI format instead if you want results closer to real time, with the ability to manually toggle the recording speed up from this setting to 210fps to match faster paced action. Standalone settings for 210fps and 420fps are also included. Such capability is fun if used in moderation, though there may be a limit to how many times you wish to watch someone in slow-mo playback walking or running as if wading through invisible treacle. Given the unusual prominence given to its video features, it's a bit of a surprise not to find a dedicated video record button; recording commences and ends with a press and subsequent press of the main shutter release button once the relevant video setting has first been selected on the shooting mode dial.

A need for speed needn't be just limited to movie clips. The camera's high-speed burst mode boasts captures up to 30fps with a single button press - albeit at a resolution of nine megapixels - and for those sports enthusiasts aiming to anticipate the action to avoid missing that 'moment', there's a pre-record function that buffers up to 40 images at a time with a half press of the shutter button, saving the most recent sequence to memory when the shutter button is fully pressed and released. Add in a flash continuous shutter option on the shooting mode dial which captures five successive images per second up to a maximum 10 shots, plus on-board face detection to ensure fast moving children and pets are always sharp, and the Casio would seem to have most bases covered when it comes to tricky subjects.

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T90 Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T90
Front Rear

Because of the above, Casio confusingly classifies the FH25 as being part of its 'high speed', rather than co-existing 'high zoom' series. The FH25's mini DSLR styling, smooth curves and rounded edges make it resemble a Canon PowerShot model, but in truth its layout, comprising integral pop up flash, raised shooting mode dial and prominent shutter release button situated on the forward slope of the finger-moulded handgrip is near identical to competitors from Nikon in the P100, Kodak's Z981, and Pentax in the X90. Like those cameras the essentials fall readily to hand, but equally true, the FH25 is not a compact if we define such as a device that will fit into your pocket. The FH25 is just marginally smaller than a starter DSLR at dimensions of 122.6x81.4x84.5mm and a weight of 483g without battery and optional SD/SDHC media. It feels solidly built despite the plastic construction and reassuringly chunky when gripped.

With a relatively sluggish start up time of an official 3.3 seconds, Raw or JPEG images are composed via the 3-inch, non-adjustable LCD screen on the back plate, or courtesy of the electronic viewfinder (EVF) ranged above. Like the Kodak Z981 and Fujifilm's comprehensive specified HS10 big zoom, power comes via four bog standard AAs inserted into the base of the hand grip, which any user will quickly want to replace with rechargeable versions. Still, these will provide around 340 stills according to CIPA standards, or 500 images if replaced with the NiMH variety.

This inevitably means the camera is weightier and bulkier than those rivals - Olympus SP-800UZ, Pentax X90 and Nikon P100 - that have opted for a slender lithium ion pack instead. At least, like the Fuji HS10, this Casio features a separate side expansion slot for SD/SDHC media - with a 85.9MB internal capacity as backup - so the user doesn't have to struggle to prevent the batteries dropping out every time a memory card is inserted or retrieved.

As could be predicted, the front of the FH25 is dominated by its large lens, a third of its fully extended glory hidden secreted within the lens barrel, with slide-on plastic cap provided for further protection. The lens barrel is surrounded by a ridged rubber grip that at first glance looks like it may be a manual focus or zoom ring. Situated just behind this at the camera's right - if viewed lens-on - is an easily overlooked pair of buttons, one for auto exposure lock, the other for macro focusing. Just above these is a more prominent button for manually activating the pop up flash - the camera won't raise it automatically if an active flash setting has been selected, but will provide an onscreen text prompt asking the user to do so. The flash in question, as with the Casio's rivals, is hidden above and behind the lens.

In the dip between lens and handgrip is a window for self-timer/AF assist lamp, the grip itself chunky and of sufficient size, with just enough room to wrap three fingers around though finger joints do rub up against the lens' rubber surround.

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T90 Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T90
Top Pop-up Flash

The top plate of the camera, as mentioned, follows a similar layout to most bridge models, with shutter release button on the forward slope of the grip encircled by a rocker switch for operating the zoom so that both fall under the forefinger. Just back from this is a recessed on/off button, and adjacent to it a raised, ridged mode dial. Compared with competitors who squeeze custom and scene modes onto said dial alongside a smattering of auto and manual modes - anything from 9 to 13 options - the Casio's own control looks a little sparse in terms of its functionality. There's one setting for shooting stills, another for standard video, then separate high speed video and high speed stills and continuous flash settings - just five options in all. The fact that they're bunched together rather than spread out evenly around the dial makes it look to the user like something is 'missing' and that the FH25 is somehow a little unfinished.

Like Casio's Exilim compacts, scene modes have been re-named 'BestShot modes' and instead of being located via the shooting mode dial, are called up onscreen via a separate button on the backplate marked 'BS'. There are a wide-ranging 26 options to be found here, the usual portrait and landscape settings joined by high speed settings variously optimized for photographing babies, children, pets, sports and night scenes.

In operation the Casio's zoom takes three seconds to travel the entirety of its broad focal range, sound-tracked by a low mechanical whirr - luckily minimal operational noise is picked up by the camera's built-in microphone. There's a brief pause while the FH25 determines focus and exposure, followed by imperceptible shutter lag as you go on to take the shot. Write speed for a maximum resolution JPEG is around two seconds, which is respectable.

With a built-in speaker and of course the aforementioned flash the other two features of the camera's top plate, we move to the back plate, which is a similarly spartan affair. With the rear dominated by the regular 4:3 ratio LCD, just right of the electronic viewfinder are a couple of pocket camera-like buttons for alternating between image capture and playback, and on its left, a dedicated button for swapping from utilising the larger screen for composition/review and the EVF above. Just nestling into the side of the EVF is a DSLR dioptric adjustment wheel.

With a rubber pad located top right of the camera back aiding purchase for the thumb when gripping the camera in your right hand, just below this are three small buttons  - smaller in fact than the available space might allow - marked 'disp' for display, calling up or disabling shooting information including a live histogram, the aforementioned 'BS' and the self explanatory 'menu' button.

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T90 Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T90
Memory Card Slot Battery Compartment

A press of the latter brings up three menu folders that fill the FH25's screen, for, variously, record, quality and 'set up'. It's in the former that amongst a three-screen assortment of options a digital zoom can be enabled or disabled, face detection and continuous AF switched on or off plus a compositional grid called up on screen. In the quality menu, fine, normal or economy compression levels can be applied to JPEGs, as well as metering switched between multi, centre weighted and spot options. More unusually it's here that digital colour filters can be applied to pictures, as well as sharpness, saturation and contrast individually tweaked. In the set up menu screen and EVF brightness can be adjusted, the camera enabled to work with Eye-Fi media cards, sounds and time and date stamps enabled or disabled, as well as the memory in use be formatted or the camera be reset to its default factory settings.

While the above is all well and good, day to day adjustments are made with a press of the 'set' button located in the centre of the FH25's four way control pad bottom right of the camera back. This is in effect a 'quick menu', though confusingly not named as such, and displays a toolbar of key shooting settings down the right hand side of the LCD, that can tabbed through using the control pad and made 'live' with a subsequent press of the set button.

From the top we find a means of adjusting aperture and exposure and dipping into a manual setting, in addition to full auto or the BestShot selection. Next down we discover a means of tweaking file size, with a JPEG selection running from 640x480 pixels up to the full 10 megapixel complement, as well as the ability to shoot 3:3 or 16:9 ratio images, or Raw + JPEG files - the latter option only selectable outside of the BestShot or full auto modes.

Next down the toolbar we find the option to adjust ISO speed, the selection here running from ISO100 up to ISO3200. Manual white balance, exposure compensation (+/- 2EV) follow, as does a means of adjusting the AF area, from spot AF to tracking AF. And that's about it. Though the four 'edges' of the control pad aren't all marked with icons, the bottom of the pad is, with, variously, the ability to select the standard flash settings on offer when in capture mode and then delete images when in playback; always useful to have a dedicated 'erase' button. The flash settings offered are auto flash, flash off, flash on, and flash with red eye reduction.

Apart from the sluggish start up the FH25 responds as quickly as you'd hope to each button press and adjustment. While the right hand flank of the camera - as viewed from the back - houses a slot for SD/SDHC and Eye-Fi enabled versions of both, the left hand side of the camera features a pair of ports covered by a rubber flap, which, here, are for mains power in, USB and AV connectivity. For the price and at this level we'd have expected HDMI connectivity too, but surprisingly the facility isn't offered. The bottom of the Casio meanwhile features a centrally located screw thread for a tripod and to one side a cover with sliding catch for the battery compartment, the four AAs as previously discussed housed within the base of the handgrip.

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 5Mb.

As anyone would expect when shooting hand held with a super zoom that despite all its DSLR stylings has the same size sensor as a regular point and shoot snapshot, the images captured aren't going to be able to hold a candle to a DSLR with a larger chip and dedicated equivalent lens.

That's to say the Casio's images are slightly soft for the most part, particularly so when shooting handheld at extreme telephoto setting even when conditions - bright blue skies - are seemingly ideal in terms of light. Still if it's a choice between being able to get the shot you intended and not, then you'll put up with such shortcomings.

Though exposures are even for the most part, in common with most compacts highlight detail is too easily lost. As our white wall test shots reveal, there's a bit of a fisheye effect at maximum 26mm-equivalent wideangle, though on busier scenes this is much less noticeable, and it has to be said that edge-to-edge sharpness is fairly well maintained. Though we've found Casio images a tad warm in the past, and did here find white balance a tad inconsistent from shot to shot when left on auto settings, for the most part colours are naturalistically rendered. The FH25 is one of the worst offenders in its bridge camera class however for visible pixel fringing between areas of high contrast.

In terms of ISO performance, it's only really when you get to ISO3200 that quality noticeably deteriorates, the results resembling a fuzzy analogue TV signal. Still, at this top setting quality is no better or worse than lesser compacts can manage at ISO1600.

Noise

There are 6 ISO settings available on the Casio EX-FH25. 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

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. You can change the in-camera sharpening level if you don't like the default look.

Original (100% Crop)

Sharpened (100% Crop)

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

Chromatic Aberrations

The Casio EX-FH25 handled chromatic aberrations fairly well during the review. There's some obvious purple fringing between areas of high contrast, as shown in the examples below.

Example 1 (100% Crop)

Example 2 (100% Crop)

chromatic1.jpg chromatic2.jpg

Macro

The Casio EX-FH25 offers a SuperMacro setting that allows you to focus on a subject that is 1cm 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-FH25 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 (26mm)

Flash On - Wide Angle (26mm)

ISO 64 ISO 64
   

Flash Off - Telephoto (520mm)

Flash On - Telephoto (520mm)

ISO 64 ISO 64

And here are a couple of portrait shots. As you can see, neither the Forced On setting or the Red Eye Reduction options 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-FH25's maximum shutter speed is 30 seconds, which is great news if you're seriously interested in night photography. The shot below was taken using a shutter speed of 4 seconds at ISO 100. I've included a 100% crop of the image to show what the quality is like.

Night Shot

Night Shot (100% Crop)

night1.jpg night1a.jpg

Sample Images

This is a selection of sample images from the Casio EX-FH25 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 Movie & Video

This is a sample movie at the highest quality setting of 1280 x 720 pixels at 30 frames per second. Please note that this 17 second movie is 53Mb in size.

Product Images

Casio EX-FH25

Front of the Camera

 
Casio EX-FH25

Front of the Camera / Turned On

 
Casio EX-FH25

Front of the Camera / Flash Raised

 
Casio EX-FH25

Isometric View

 
Casio EX-FH25

Isometric View

 
Casio EX-FH25

Rear of the Camera

 
Casio EX-FH25

Rear of the Camera / Image Displayed

 
Casio EX-FH25

Top of the Camera

 
Casio EX-FH25

Bottom of the Camera

 

Casio EX-FH25

Side of the Camera

 
Casio EX-FH25
Side of the Camera
 
Casio EX-FH25
Battery Compartment
 
Casio EX-FH25
Memory Card Slot

Conclusion

There's no doubt that while the Casio EX-FH25's 20x optical zoom on offer is one of the more modest 'super zooms' currently on the market, it does, forgive the pun, afford a wide degree of creative versatility. Build quality feels robust despite the plastic construction, and while we may grumble at the inclusion of AAs rather than a rechargeable pack for power, there are those who will feel comfortable with being able to find easy replacements without having to pack a charger and worry about plug compatibility when traveling abroad.

However we obviously can't help thinking that, for the exact same money Fujifilm's tank-like HS10 would be a better bet if zoom power is your prime concern, sporting as it offers a 30x reach and further has the advantage of an angle adjustable LCD screen. The alternative to both is Olympus' ambitious yet flawed SP-800UZ, also with 30x optical zoom, yet at £50 cheaper.

So, what you're paying a premium for here seems to be the slow motion video features and class-leading continuous capture options, which, even though they result in lower resolution results than can be had from standard settings, make even Canon's pro-sports photographer favourite the EOS-1D Mark IV feel lethargic by comparison. However the image quality displayed here is purely aimed at the amateur, and probably in truth the family user at that who can never get the kids to stay still long enough for a visual keepsake.

If you don't need its Speedy Gonzales capabilities, then there are better options than the Casio EX-FH25 out there for anyone looking for a broader than average zoom range without spending a fortune on equivalent optics for their DSLR.

3.5 stars

Ratings (out of 5)
Design 3.5
Features 3.5
Ease-of-use 4
Image quality 4
Value for money 3

Review Roundup

Reviews of the Casio EX-FH25 from around the web.

steves-digicams.com »

Casio's new Exilim EX-FH25 is an updated version of the EX-FH20 that has been recently released in Japan. The camera features a new CMOS sensor and couple new Best Shot scene modes that are said to create higher quality images in low-light situations. These new modes allow the camera to capture several images and combine them to create one high-quality image. As with the EX-FH20, the EX-FH25 has the ability to capture 40, 9-megapixel images per second or up to 1000fps in high-speed movie mode. The camera's 20x optical zoom lens is the other major selling point. With a 35mm equivalent of 26-520mm, this is one of the most versatile and one of the largest zooms on the market today.
Read the full review »

Specifications

Number of Effective Pixels 10.10 million
Image Sensor   1/2.3-inch High sensitivity CMOS sensor
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 (monaural)
Built-in Flash Memory (Image Area) 85.9 MB
Recording Media SDHC Memory Card, SD Memory Card compatible
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)
STD Movies 640 × 480 (30 fps)
HD Movies 1.280 × 720 (30 fps)
Hi-Speed Movies (HS) HS 1000 (224 × 64, 1000 fps), HS 420 (224 × 168, 420 fps), HS 240 (448 x 336, 240fps), HS 120 (640 x 480, 120fps), HS 30-240 (448 x 336, 30fps - 240fps), HS 30-120 (640 x 480, 30-120 fps)
Recording Capacity (With Still Image at Maximum Image Size Setting) Still Images (RAW) Built-in Flash Memory Approx. 4 shots (Fine) / 5 shots (Normal) / 5 shots (Economy)
SD Memory Card 1GB*2 Approx. 47 shots (Fine) / 56 shots (Normal) / 60 shots (Economy)
Still Images (JPEG) Built-in Flash Memory Approx. 13 shots (Fine) / 25 shots (Normal) / 38 shots (Economy)
SD Memory Card 1GB*2 Approx. 151 shots (Fine) / 286 shots (Normal) / 426 shots (Economy)
Movies Recording Time Maximum Recording Time per File: 10 min.
Built-in Flash Memory Approx. 23 seconds (HD) / Approx. 28 seconds (HS 1000 fps)
SD Memory Card 1GB*2 Approx. 4 min. 24 seconds (HD) / Approx. 5 min. 14 seconds (HS 1000 fps)
Operating Speed Start-up time*3*4 Approx. 3.3 seconds
Shutter Release Time Lag*3*4 Approx. 0.03 second
Image Playback*2 Approx. 0.1 second/image
Shot to Shot Time*2*3*4*5 Approx. 1.4 seconds
Normal Speed CS Approx. 2.1 second intervals
High-speed CS Maximum 30 frames per second at 3648 x 2736 pixels (Speed 40fps)
Flash Continuous Shutter Maximum 5 frames per second (up to 10 images) at 3264 x 2448
Lens*6 Construction 14 lenses in 11 groups, including aspherical lens
F-number F2.8 (W) to 4.5 (T)
Focal Length   f=4.6 to 92.0mm
35mm Film Equivalent Approx. 26 to 520mm
Zoom Optical Zoom 20X
Digital Zoom 4X (80X in combination with optical zoom)
HD Zoom 114.0X (image size: 640 x 480 pixels)
Focusing Focus Type Contrast Detection Auto Focus
Focus Modes Auto Focus, Macro Mode, Super Macro, Manual Focus
AF Area Spot, Free or Tracking
AF Assist Lamp Yes
Focus Range*6 (From Lens Surface) Auto Focus Approx. 12 cm to ∞ (W)
Macro   Approx. 12 cm to 50 cm (W)
Super Macro Approx. 1 cm to 12 cm
Manual Focus Approx. 12cm to ∞ (W), Approx. 1cm to ∞ (zoom lens position: super macro)
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*7 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*8   F2.8 (W) to F7.9 (W)
Aperture Priority AE/ Manual Exposure
White Balance Auto WB, Daylight, Overcast, Shade, Day white FL, Daylight FL, Tungsten, Manual WB
Sensitivity (SOS/REI)*9 Still Images Auto, ISO100, ISO200, ISO400, ISO800, ISO1600, ISO 3200
Movies Auto (Hi-Speed Movie when in Manual Exposure mode: ISO100, ISO200, ISO400, ISO800, ISO1600, ISO 3200)
Other Recording Functions Image Stabilization Mechanism CMOS-shift image stabilization
Prerecord Still Images Maximum speed: 40 fps, maximum recording capacity: 30 images
Prerecord Movie Yes
YouTube™ Capture Mode Yes
BEST SHOT   Yes: 26 scenes
High Speed Anti Shake*10 Yes
High Speed Night Scene*10 Yes
High Speed Lighting*10 Yes
High Speed Best Selection*10 Yes
Multi-Motion Image*10 Yes
Move Out Continuous Shutter*10 Yes
Move In Continuous Shutter*10 Yes
Face Detection Yes
Self-timer 10 seconds, 2 seconds, Triple Self-timer
Built-in Flash Flash Modes Auto, Flash Off, Flash On, Red Eye Reduction
Flash Range*6 Approx. 0.4 to 7.0m (W), approx. 1.3 to 4.4m (T)
Flash continuous shutter*10: Approx. 0.6 to 2.3m (W), approx. 1.3 to 1.4m (T) (when 5 shots taken)
Flash Charge Time Approx. 5seconds
Finder Monitor Screen 3.0-inch TFT color LCD (Super Clear LCD), 230,400 dots (960 × 240)
Electronic Viewfinder 0.2-inch LCD, Equal to 201,600 dots
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, summer time
Input/Output Terminals   USB/AV port, AC adaptor connection (DC-IN)
USB Hi-Speed USB
Microphone Monaural
Speaker Monaural
Power Requirements AA-size alkaline battery (LR6) x 4, AA, rechargeable Ni-MH battery (HR6) x 4, AC adaptor
Battery Life Number of Shots*11 (CIPA Standards) Approx. 340 still images (alkaline battery), approx. 500 still images (rechargeable Ni-MH battery)
Continuous Playback (Still Images) Approx 5 hr. (alkaline battery), approx 6 hr. 30 min. (rechargeable Ni-MH battery)
Dimensions (Excluding Projections) 122.6 (W) x 81.4 (H) x 84.5 (D)mm
Weight (Excluding Battery and Accessories) Approx. 483g
Bundled Accessories AA-size alkaline battery (LR6) x 4, USB cable, AV cable, strap, lens cap, cap holder, CD-ROM
Options AC Adapter (AD-C100), Soft Case (ESC-170)
 
*1. DNG file format is one type of RAW image file, and it is recommended by Adobe Systems for use as a standard image file format.
*2. When using Panasonic (Matsushita) Pro High Speed 1GB SD Memory Card.
*3. When using built-in memory.
*4. With built-in flash off.
*5. When set at maximum image size and normal image quality.
*6. Range is affected by optical zoom.
*7. May differ according to camera setting.
*8. Aperture changed by optical zoom or recording mode.
*9. SOS: Standard Output Sensitivity.
*10. When set at 9M (3456 x 2592) and fine image quality.
*11. Auto Mode, standard brightness monitor setting.

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