Ricoh CX5 Review

February 4, 2011 | Mark Goldstein | Rating star Rating star Rating star Rating star

Introduction

The Ricoh CX5 is a new 10 megapixel point-and-shoot compact camera featuring a 10.7x, 28-300mm zoom lens. Successor to the 6-month old CX4 model, the Ricoh CX5 now offers faster autofocus speed due to a new hybrid AF system, recording of images with improved resolution using the “Super-resolution” setting, and telephoto shooting at up to 600mm equivalent using the Super-resolution Zoom. The Ricoh CX5's key features otherwise remain the same as its predecessor, with a 10 megapixel back-illuminated sensor, 3 inch HVGA LCD screen with 920K dots, Smooth Imaging Engine IV image processing engine, and 720p HD video recording. There's also a Scene Auto shooting mode for beginners, face recognition, 1cm macro mode, Dynamic Range mode, range of creative shooting effects, and an electronic level to help ensure straight horizons. The CX5 is cheaper than the CX4 was on launch, retailing for £259.99 in the UK and $399 in the USA.

Ease of Use

The design and feature-set of the Ricoh CX5 are virtually identical to the previous CX4 model, so a lot of comments that we made about that camera will be repeated here. It measures exactly the same at 101.5mm (W) x 58.6mm (H) x 29.4mm respectively and weighs slightly less at 176g. The CX5 is available in either silver, pink or a more serious black - Ricoh provided the latter for our review.

The CX5 is a compact digital camera that easily fits in the palm of your hand, and you certainly won't notice carrying it in a trouser/shirt pocket or a handbag. As soon as you pick it up, the Ricoh CX5 feels as solidly made, refined and purposeful as its predecessors. The bottom of the lens mounting area is cut off in line with the bottom of the camera, which still looks rather strange. One noticeable difference between the CX5 and CX4 is the relocation of the built-in flash away from the lens to make room for the passive AF sensor of the hybrid AF system.

This is the principal new feature of the CX5 and the main reason why you would choose this model over a discounted CX4. Essentially it speeds up the auto-focusing to as fast as 0.2 second for both wide-angle and telephoto lens settings, using the traditional Contrast AF system that most compacts have together with a new area-based passive AF sensor that continuously measures the distance between the camera and subject. Although we never found the AF speed to be a problem on the CX4, the new model is noticeably quicker and just as reliable in both good and bad lighting, so if auto-focus speed is top of your wnats list, the CX5 won't disappoint.

The CX5's other major new feature is Super Resolution technology, which is very similar to recent systems from Panasonic and Casio. It either makes a standard image look like a higher resolution one by processing the contour areas, texture areas and smooth areas individually, or it digitally boosts the zoom magnification from 10x to 20x with a claimed minimal loss of quality and no reduction in resolution. To achieve the former, you have to select Super Resolution in the main menu and then choose either the Weak or Strong setting. To increase the Super Resolution zoom, you just zoom past the white part of the on-screen zoom bar into the green area, which offers up to a maximum of 21.4x zoom. Note that Super Resolution zoom isn't available in the movie, continuous or creative shooting modes.

As with the systems from Panasonic and Casio, it's easy to tell which image was taken with Super Resolution turned on and which ones with it turned off, particularly if viewing onscreen at 100% magnification, as our test shots on the Image Quality page show. The difference isn't quite so apparent on a print up to A3 in size, but I'm not convinced enough to recommend it except when you really need the extra reach - it undoubtedly improves on the digital zoom, but not so much that I'd regularly use it.

The Ricoh CX5's 10.7x zoom lens offers a 28-300mm focal range which places the CX5 in the popular "travel zoom" category of cameras, although several rivals offer 12x and even 15x lenses in a similarly sized body. When the lens is fully extended, the camera measures over 8cm in depth, but thankfully it retracts fully back into the body when it is turned off. The 28-300mm range is very versatile, covering everything from wide-angle landscapes to close-up action photos. The maximum apertures are respectable enough at f/3.5 at wide-angle and f/5.6 at telephoto. Helpfully the zoom mechanism becomes quicker as you progress through the range, a neat feature that really cuts down on waiting for the camera to do your bidding.

Ricoh CX4 Ricoh CX4
Front Rear

The Ricoh CX5 features an anti-shake system called Camera Shake Correction - turn it on in the Main menu and the Ricoh CX5 automatically compensates for camera shake by the equivalent of about 3.7 shutter-speed stops. 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. Ricoh seem to have realised the importance of this system, as it is turned on by default, and thankfully leaving the anti-shake system on didn't negatively affect the battery-life, with the camera managing just under 300 shots before the battery needed to be recharged.

The Ricoh CX5 only has 10 external controls in total, leaving plenty of room for the large 3 inch LCD screen that dominates the back of the camera. The CX5's screen has a commendably high resolution of 920K dots, and it certainly shows, being noticeably sharper and brighter than cameras with standard 230K dot screens. Both text and images really come alive on a breath-taking display that's still one of the best of any camera that we've ever reviewed.

There's a DSLR-like mode dial on top of the CX5 which lets you select from the Camera, S-Auto, Scene, Creative Shooting, Continuous, and Movie options, plus two settings called MY1 and MY2 which allow you to configure the CX5 for different uses and provide quick access to each configuration (the camera remembers the settings when it's turned off).

The S-Auto mode is aimed firmly at beginners. Much like similar systems on rival cameras, when the CX5 is set to S-Auto it automatically identifies the type of scene being photographed and selects the appropriate scene mode (portrait, sports, night portrait, landscape, nightscape, macro mode), useful if you're not sure which mode to pick yourself. Like most automatic systems, it's not infallible, but does reliably pick one of the above scenes most of the time. There are also 3 new scene modes - Cooking, Fireworks and Golf Swing Continuous mode - bringing the total to 14.

The Dynamic Range double shot mode, now available as one of the Creative Shooting options, is one of the Ricoh CX5's star attractions, taking advantage of the CMOS sensor to record images with much greater dynamic range than most compacts. When the Ricoh CX5 is in DR mode it takes two images with different exposures, and then records a single image that combines the properly exposed parts of each one. There are four DR strengths - Very Weak, Weak, Medium and Strong - plus an Auto setting if you're unsure which is the best setting. You can also choose to take a DR and Normal image at the same time (both are saved to the memory card), useful for quickly comparing the effect. There's also the option to select a Priority Range for each DR strength, with Off, Highlights and Shadows your choices - this allows the more advanced user to tip the balance in favour of the shadow or highlight areas.

In practice the Dynamic Range mode works really well, resulting in images that have noticeably more dynamic range that those shot in the Normal mode, and far surpassing most other compact cameras. If you want to shoot images that retain detail in both the highlight and shadow areas, then the Ricoh CX5 is a great choice. You can see the results of using the the different modes for yourself on the Image Quality page, with a side-by side comparison of the Normal and four different DR modes. There is one main drawback though; the DR images have noticeably less saturated colours than the Normal version, which more accurately matches the scene.

Ricoh have added a range of creative filters to the CX5 that also sit under the Creative Shooting mode, including Miniaturize, High Contrast B&W (both were available as scene modes on the CX4), Soft Focus, Cross Process and Toy Camera. While these are fun to play with initially, they're nowhere near as useful as the Dynamic Range mode.

Ricoh CX4 Ricoh CX4
Front Front

The CX5 offers exactly the HD video recording capabilities as the CX4, with three movie sizes available - 1280x720, 640x480 and 320x240 pixels - all at 30 frames per second. and all saved in the AVI file format, which unfortunately does result in some rather large file sizes. Sound recording is mono only, and there are no advanced features like Windcut or Pause / Restart as seen on other cameras, so Ricoh still have some work to do in this area.

There are three scene modes of particular interest. The Discreet mode turns off the flash, AF Assist lamp and all operational sounds, very convenient when shooting in museums or anywhere that you don't want to draw attention to yourself. The Pets mode turns off the flash, AF auxiliary light and sounds to avoid startling your loved one, although it can only detect and focus on cat's faces (canine owners need to look elsewhere). The Night Landscape Multi-shot mode takes up to 4 shots and combines them to help prevent blur and reduce noise. This mode can also be used hand-held without a tripod.

Multi-target Auto Focusing is another intriguing feature, although it doesn't quite live up to expectations. The CX5 takes 7 consecutive images at different focal distances and allows you to choose the best one. It's quite useful for macro work when it's tricky to judge the exact focus point, although the combination of the CX5's high-res screen and manual focus mode already makes this much easier than on most other compact cameras. You can potentially also use the Multi-target Auto Focusing mode to shoot the 7 images, then combine them together in Photoshop or a similar application to create a single image with wider focus than a single image allows. In practice, however, the CX5 tends to always focus on a particular part of the scene and doesn't differentiate enough between the 7 shots to really make this technique effective.

The Subject Tracking AF mode automatically tracks moving subjects and ensures that they're in focus and also well-exposed when you decide to take the picture, making capturing unpredictable subjects like small children or animals much easier. In practice the CX5 performed very well in this mode, quickly locking onto the main subject and reliably following it around the frame, although the loud noise of the AF system as it does so is rather off-putting.

Multi-pattern auto white balance is useful for scenes with mixed lighting - daylight and flash, or fluorescent and daylight, for example. Instead of just taking an average reading from the whole scene, which inevitably gets the white balance wrong for the secondary light source, the CX5 breaks the image down into small areas and analyzes and sets the white balance for each one. In practice it produces a subtle but noticeable effect that is particularly useful for capturing more natural portraits when using flash.

By default the Adjust four-way joystick on the rear of the CX5 allows you to quickly adjust 5 different settings that are commonly used. Press it to alter Exposure Compensation, White Balance, ISO Speed, Quality and the AF/AE Target Selection mode. Even better, the Adj. menu is customisable - you can choose what the first four settings do, allowing you to control exactly what you want quick access to. The Adjust button also doubles up as the OK button to select options and it sets the Macro and Flash options by pressing left and right - there's another button underneath to access the Main menu system. Ricoh have also included a customisable Function (Fn) button, which can be optionally used to control one of 7 settings - AE Lock is a good choice. In theory it all sounds like a convoluted recipe for disaster, but in practice it works well, allowing quick access to most of the major functions of the camera without having to scroll through the menu system.

The Ricoh CX5 is a point and shoot camera with no advanced exposure controls. Having said that, the CX5 does have a few notable tricks up its sleeve. The AF/AE Target Selection mode allows you to shift the target for both auto focus and automatic exposure without having to move the camera, useful for tripod-mounted macro subjects, but also available in any shooting mode. The [F1:1] Picture Size records your photos in square format (at 7 megapixels), similar to some medium format cameras, offering a new perspective on the world. The Fix Minimum Aperture function forces the camera to shoot at the smallest aperture available, which gives a greater depth of field in the resulting photograph.

Ricoh CX4 Ricoh CX4
Memory Card Slot Battery Compartment

The electronic leveler is an innovative feature borrowed from the GR Digital III and GX200 models. This helps to ensure level shots, both in landscape and portrait mode. You can view the horizontal indicator on the LCD monitor to ensure that shots are aligned horizontally. If you can't see the LCD screen in very bright sunlight, then the camera can also be set to make a sound to indicate a level horizon. It doesn't sound like a big deal in theory, but in practice it really helps to make the horizons in all your wide-angle shots perfectly level. Another very welcome feature is the ability to set the flash intensity, which can be adjusted in 1/3 EV steps across the -2.0EV to +2.0EV range, which gives you precise control over the flash output.

The face recognition feature offered by the Ricoh CX5 recognises a maximum of 8 faces and locks focus quite quickly. Ricoh have chosen to make it a specific scene mode, rather than a general setting that applies to whichever shooting mode is currently selected, which rather limits its usefulness. The Pre-AF and Continuous AF functions are more useful, helping you to quickly and accurately focus on the subject. As its name suggests, Pre-AF sets the focus before you've even half-pressed the shutter button, while Continuous AF automatically adjusts the focus to match the subject movement, making the CX5 well suited to action photography.

The main menu system on the Ricoh CX5 is straight-forward to use and is accessed by pressing the Menu button on the rear of the camera. There are two main menus, Shooting and Setup. Quite a lot of the camera's main options, such as image size, sharpness, metering mode and continuous mode, are accessed here. Despite offering 10 onscreen choices at once, the sharp display ensures that the various options and icons are clear and legible. If you have never used a digital camera before, or you're upgrading from a more basic model, reading the comprehensive and easy-to-follow manual before you start is a must. Thankfully Ricoh have chosen to supply it in printed format, rather than as a PDF on a CD, so you can also carry it with you.

Ricoh have a long history of creating responsive cameras, and the CX5 certainly extends that tradition. The start-up time from turning the Ricoh CX5 on to being ready to take a photo is quick at around 1 second, and it only takes just over 1.5 seconds to zoom from the widest focal length to the longest, impressive given the focal range. Focusing is very quick in good light and the camera happily achieves focus most of the time indoors or in low-light situations, even at the tele-photo end of the lens. It takes about 0.5 second to store a JPEG image, allowing you to keep shooting as they are being recorded onto the memory card - there is no LCD blackout between each image. In the default Continuous mode the camera takes 5 frames per second at the highest JPEG image quality, which is excellent for this class of camera. In addition M-Continuous Plus (9M) takes 15 images at 5ps and M-Continuous Plus (2M) takes 30 images in one second, and you can also shoot at 30 frames/sec at 2 megapixels and an ultra-fast 120 frames/sec for 1 second or 60 frames/sec for 2 seconds at 640x480 pixels. In all these modes, the consecutively shot images are recorded as a single MPO file (a file format with multiple still images in a single file).

Once you have captured a photo, the Ricoh CX5 has an above average 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 thumbnails (81 onscreen at once!), zoom in and out up to 16x magnification, view slideshows with audio, set the print order, delete, trim, rotate, protect and resize an image. There's a Recover File option which will rescue deleted images, just so long as you don't turn the camera off first. Level Compensation allows you to correct the contrast and tone of an image after it has been taken, and White Balance Compensation the white balance. The Skew Correction function alters any photo that was taken at an angle so it appears as if it were taken directly in front of you.

You can "flag" an image, which essentially allows you to choose up to three files and then immediately display them by pressing the Fn button during playback, and images are automatically rotated during playback to fit the current orientation of the camera. The Display button toggles detailed settings information about each picture on and off, such as the ISO rating and aperture / shutter speed, and there is a small histogram available during both shooting and playback. The White Saturation display mode during image playback indicates over-exposed highlights by flashing those areas on and off. When taking a photo, pressing the Display button toggles between the detailed information, the histogram and gridlines to aid composition.

That concludes our tour of the CX5's design and features - now let's take a look at its image quality.

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 3.5Mb.

The Ricoh CX5 produced images of excellent quality during the review period. The Ricoh CX5's main drawback in terms of image quality is noise, with ISO 400 showing some noise and blurring of detail. The noise and loss of fine detail get progressively worse as you go from ISO 400 to ISO 1600, with the fastest 3200 setting not really worth using. The MAX noise reduction mode does noticeably reduce the noise levels at each ISO setting, but at the expense of further reducing detail in the image.

The Ricoh CX5 handled chromatic aberrations well with limited purple fringing effects appearing only in high contrast situations. The 10 megapixel images were just a little soft straight out of the camera at the default sharpen setting of Normal and either require some further sharpening in an application like Adobe Photoshop, or you should set the in-camera sharpening to Sharp. The night photograph was OK, with the maximum shutter speed of 8 seconds allowing you to capture just enough light for most situations.

Macro performance is a stand-out highlight, allowing you to focus as close as 1cm away from the subject, although there is a lot of lens distortion and shadowing at such a close distance. Anti-shake works very well when hand-holding the camera in low-light conditions or when using the telephoto end of the zoom range. The built-in flash worked well indoors, with no red-eye and good overall exposure.

The Dynamic Range mode works really well, resulting in images that have noticeably more dynamic range that those shot in the Normal mode. If you want to shoot images that retain detail in both the highlight and shadow areas, then the Ricoh CX5 is a great choice. There is one main drawback though; the DR images have noticeably less saturated colours than the Normal version, which more accurately matches the scene.

It's easy to tell which image was taken with Super Resolution turned on and which ones with it turned off, particularly if viewing onscreen at 100% magnification. The difference isn't quite so apparent on a print up to A3 in size, but I'm not convinced enough to recommend it except when you really need the extra reach - it undoubtedly improves on the digital zoom, but not so much that I'd regularly use it.

Noise

There are 6 ISO settings available on the Ricoh CX5. Here are some 100% crops which show the noise levels for each ISO setting, with noise reduction set to Off and the strongest setting of MAX.

Noise Reduction Off Noise Reduction MAX

ISO 100 (100% Crop)

ISO 100 (100% Crop)

   

ISO 200 (100% Crop)

ISO 200 (100% Crop)

   

ISO 400 (100% Crop)

ISO 400 (100% Crop)

   

ISO 800 (100% Crop)

ISO 800 (100% Crop)

   

ISO 1600 (100% Crop)

ISO 1600 (100% Crop)

   

ISO 3200 (100% Crop)

ISO 3200 (100% Crop)

Focal Range

The Ricoh CX5's 10.7x zoom lens offers a very versatile focal range, as illustrated by these examples:

28mm

300mm

Super Resolution

This either makes a standard image look like a higher resolution one by processing the contour areas, texture areas and smooth areas individually, or it digitally boosts the zoom magnification from 10x to 20x with a claimed minimal loss of quality and no reduction in resolution.

Super Resolution - Off (100% Crop)

Super Resolution - Weak (100% Crop)

   

Super Resolution - Strong (100% Crop)

 
 

 

Super Resolution Zoom - Off

Super Resolution Zoom - On - 21.7x

Dynamic Range

When the Ricoh CX5 is in DR mode (Dynamic Range double shot) it takes two images with different exposures, and then records a single image that combines the properly exposed parts of each one. You can also choose to take a DR and Normal image at the same time (both are saved to the memory card). Here is an example which was shot with Normal and then the four DR modes (Very Weak, Weak, Medium and Strong).

Normal

Dynamic Range - Very Weak

   

Dynamic Range - Weak

Dynamic Range - Medium

   

Dynamic Range - Strong

 
 

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 of Normal. You can change the in-camera sharpening level to one of the preset levels (Sharp, Normal or Soft) if you don't like the default look.

Original (100% Crop)

Sharpened (100% Crop)

   

File Quality

The Ricoh CX5 has 2 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 (3.58Mb) (100% Crop)

10M Normal (2.04Mb) (100% Crop)

Chromatic Aberrations

The Ricoh CX5 handled chromatic aberrations well during the review, with limited purple and green fringing present around the edges of objects in certain high-contrast situations, as shown in the examples below.

Example 1 (100% Crop)

Example 2 (100% Crop)

Macro

The Ricoh CX5 offers a Macro setting that allows you to focus on a subject that is just 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

Flash

The flash settings on the Ricoh CX5 are Auto flash, Red-eye Flash, Flash On, Flash Synchro and Flash Off. These shots of a white coloured wall were taken at a distance of 1.5m.

Suppressed Flash - Wide Angle (28mm)

Forced Flash - Wide Angle (28mm)

ISO 64 ISO 64
   

Suppressed Flash - Telephoto (300mm)

Forced Flash - Telephoto (300mm)

ISO 64 ISO 64

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

Forced Flash

Forced Flash (100% Crop)
   

Red-eye Reduction Auto

Red-eye Reduction Auto (100% Crop)

Night

The Ricoh CX5's maximum shutter speed is 8 seconds via the Time Exposure main menu option, which is fairly good news if you're seriously interested in night photography. The shot below was taken using a shutter speed of 8 seconds at ISO 100.

The Night Landscape Multi-shot mode takes up to 4 shots and combines them to help prevent blur and reduce noise. This mode can also be used hand-held without a tripod.

Night Shot

Night Shot (100% Crop)

   

Night Landscape Multi-shot

Night Landscape Multi-shot (100% Crop)

Anti Shake

The Ricoh CX5 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)

1/9th / 28mm
     
1/6th / 300mm

Creative Modes

The CX5 offers a range of creative filters that sit under the Creative Shooting mode, including Dynamic Range, Miniaturize, High Contrast B&W, Soft Focus, Cross Process and Toy Camera.

Off

Dynamic Range - Auto

   

Miniaturize

High Contrast B&W

   

Soft Focus

Cross Process
   
Toy Camera  
 

Sample Images

This is a selection of sample images from the Ricoh CX5 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 quality setting of 1280x720 at 30 frames per second. Please note that this 16 second movie is 68.3Mb in size.

Product Images

Ricoh CX4

Front of the Camera

 
Ricoh CX4

Front of the Camera / Lens Extended

 
Ricoh CX4

Isometric View

 
Ricoh CX4

Isometric View

 
Ricoh CX4

Rear of the Camera

 
Ricoh CX4

Rear of the Camera / Image Displayed

 
Ricoh CX4

Rear of the Camera / Turned On

 
Ricoh CX4

Rear of the Camera / Main Menu

 
Ricoh CX4

Rear of the Camera / Adjust Menu

 

Ricoh CX4

Top of the Camera

 
Ricoh CX4

Bottom of the Camera

 
Ricoh CX4

Side of the Camera

 
Ricoh CX4

Side of the Camera

 
Ricoh CX4

Front of the Camera

 
Ricoh CX4

Front of the Camera

 
Ricoh CX4

Memory Card Slot

 
Ricoh CX4

Battery Compartment

Conclusion

Improved auto-focus speed and slightly lower price aside, there's very little reason to choose the CX5 over the 6-month-old CX4. More seriously, Ricoh's travel-zoom camera is now starting to really lag behind the better-featured competition.

The 0.2 second AF speed is undoubtedly the CX5's main attraction, although we were never particularly concerned about the performance of the CX4. The hybrid system makes the CX5 one of the quicker-focusing compacts on the market, so if you're frustrated by missing the moment because your current camera takes too long to focus, then this model is well worth a look.

The CX5's other "improvements" are much less worthy of attention. The Super Resolution technology does boost the 10.7x zoom to a maximum of 21.7x, but only with an obvious drop in image quality, and both the Weak and Strong Super Resolution modes introduce unwanted artifacts. Eye-Fi card compatibility and three new scene modes are the only other new features that the CX5 has up its sleeve, with very little new to shout about when compared with its predecessor.

The same 10 megapixel back-illuminated sensor offers noise-free settings of ISO 100-200, usable settings of 400-800, and useful in an emergency ISO 1600, identical to the CX4 but now falling behind more recent and comparable cameras which offer better performance at ISO 400 and 800. The noise reduction system does significantly reduce the noise on its maximum setting, but with the side-effect of smoothing out fine detail - you'll need to decide which is most important to you. Meanwhile the High definition 720p video mode is unchanged and therefore suffers from the same major problems, most notably the AVI format creating large files sizes, the inability to zoom or focus during recording, and the lack of stereo sound.

The CX5 is virtually indistinguishable from the slightly older CX4 in terms of its design, image quality and feature set, with only the faster AF system to get truly excited about. As with the CX4, while the CX5 remains a good point and shoot camera and the price has commendably been reduced to £259 / $399, it simply doesn't offer enough to either justify the upgrade from the previous generation or to keep up with its main rivals. Recommended, but there are quite a few better options to consider...

4 stars

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

Specifications

No. of Effective Pixels (Camera) Approximately 10.00 million pixels
Image Sensor 1/2.3-inch CMOS (total pixels: approx. 10.60 million pixels)
Lens Focal length f=4.9-52.5mm (Equivalent to 28–300 mm for 35 mm film cameras. With Step Zoom set, option of any of eight fixed lengths: 28 mm, 35 mm, 50 mm, 85 mm, 105 mm, 135 mm, 200 mm, and 300 mm)
F-aperture F3.5 (Wide) - F5.6 (Telephoto)
Shooting
Distance
Normal shooting: Approx. 30 cm–infinity (Wide), approx. 1.5 m–infinity (Telephoto) (from the front of the lens)
Macro: Approx. 1 cm–infinity (Wide), approx. 28 cm–infinity (Telephoto), approx. 1 cm–infinity (Zoom Macro) (from the front of the lens)
Lens Construction 10 elements in 7 groups (Aspheric lens: 4 elements and 5 surfaces)
Zoom Magnification Optical zoom: 10.7 x (Equivalent to 28–300 mm for 35-mm film cameras)
Super-resolution zoom: 2.0 x, up to 21.4 x (Equivalent to 600 mm) when used with optical zoom
Digital zoom: 4.8 x, up to 103 x (Equivalent to 2,880 mm) when used with optical zoom and super-resolution zoom
Auto resize zoom: 5.7 x *1, up to 61.0 x *1 (Equivalent to 1,710 mm) when used with optical zoom
Focus Modes Multi AF / Spot AF / Face-priority Multi AF (Contrast AF method with AF auxiliary light) / Subject-tracking AF / Multi-target AF (Contrast AF method) / Manual Focus / Snap / ∞ (Fixed focus method)
Image Stabilizer Image sensor shift method image stabilizer
Shutter Speed *2 Still image 1/2000 – 1, 2, 4, 8 sec.
Movie 1/2000 sec. – 1/30 sec.
Continuous Shooting Continuous shooting speed *3 Approx. 5 frames/sec. (10M 4:3F; continuous shooting speed is approx. 3 frames/sec. for the 12th picture on)
Continuous shooting capacity 999 pictures
Exposure Control Metering Mode Multi (256 segments) / Center-weighted light metering / Spot metering
Exposure Mode Programme AE
Exposure
Compensation
Manual compensation (-2.0 EV – +2.0 EV, 1/3EV steps), Auto bracket function (−0.5EV, ±0, +0.5EV)
ISO Sensitivity (Standard Output Sensitivity) AUTO / ISO100 / ISO200 / ISO400 / ISO800 / ISO1600 / ISO3200
White Balance Mode Auto / Multi-pattern Auto / Outdoors / Cloudy / Incandescent 1 / Incandescent 2 / Fluorescent / Manual / White balance bracket function
Flash Built-in Flash Mode Auto (During low light and when the subject is backlit) / Anti Red-eye / Flash on / Slow Synchro / Flash off
Built-in flash range Approx. 20 cm – 4.0 m (Wide), approx. 28 cm – 3.0 m (Telephoto) (ISO AUTO, auto ISO with up to ISO1600, measured from the front of the lens)
Flash compensation +/-2.0EV (1/3EV Steps)
Monitor 3.0-inch Transparent LCD (approx. 920,000 dots)
Shooting Mode Auto shooting mode / Movie mode / Scene auto mode / Scene mode (Portrait / Discreet Mode / Night. Portrait / Night Landscape Multi-shot / Sports / Landscape / Zoom Macro / Pets / Skew Correct Mode / High Sensitivity / Text / Fireworks / Cooking / Golf Swing Continuous Mode) / My Settings mode / Continuous mode / Creative shooting modes (Dynamic Range Double Shot / Miniaturize / High Contrast B&W / Soft Focus / Cross Process / Toy Camera)
Picture Quality Mode *4 F (Fine) / N (Normal)
No. of Pixels Recorded Still image / Multi-picture 3648 x 2736, 3648 x 2432, 2736 x 2736, 3648 x 2048, 2592 x 1944, 2048 x 1536, 1728 x 1296 (Multi-Picture only), 1280 x 960, 640 x 480
Movie 1280 x 720 *5, 640 x 480, 320 x 240
Text 3648 x 2736, 2048 x 1536
Recording Media SD memory cards, SDHC memory cards (up to 32 GB), Internal memory (Approx. 40MB)
Compatible with Eye-Fi cards (X2 Series)
Image File Format Still Image JPEG (Exif ver. 2.3) *6
Multi-picture CIPA DC-007-2009 Multi-Picture Format
Movie AVI (Open DML Motion JPEG Format compliant)
Compression method JPEG Baseline Format compliant
Other Major Shooting Functions Continuous, Self-Timer (Operation time: Approx. 10 sec. / Approx. 2 sec. / Custom self-timer), Interval Timer (Shooting time: 5 sec.–1 hr., in 5 sec. increments) *7, Color Bracket function, Focus Bracket function, AE/AF Target Shift, Histogram, Grid Guide, Electronic Level
Other Major Playback Functions Grid View, Enlarged Display (maximum 16×), Resize, Level Compensation, White Balance Compensation, Trim, Flag, Slideshow, DPOF Setting
External Interface USB 2.0 (High-speed USB) / Audio-Visual (AV) terminals (Mass storage compatible *8 AV Out 1.0Vp-p (75Ω)), HDMI Micro Output terminals (Type D)
Video Signal Format NTSC, PAL switchable
Power Supply Rechargeable Battery(DB-100) x1
Battery Consumption *9 Based on CIPA Standard: Using the DB-100, Approx. 280 pictures When Sleep is OFF *10
External Dimensions 101.5 mm (W) x 58.6 mm (H) x 29.4 mm (D) (24.4 mm at thinnest part)
Weight Approx. 197 g (including the supplied battery and SD memory card)
Approx. 176 g (Camera body only)
Operating Temperature Range 0°C - 40°C
   
  • *The maximum recording time is the estimated total recording time. The maximum recording time per shooting is 29 minutes or 4GB.
  • *The maximum number of consecutive shots that can be taken using continuous mode is 999. When the number of remaining shots is 1000 or more, “999” is displayed on the picture display.
  • *The figures shown for the maximum number of shots that can be recorded for M-Cont (2M), M-Cont (10M), and Speed Cont are the estimated total number of shots that can be recorded. The number of shots that can be recorded at one time is 26 for M-Cont Plus (2M), 15 for M-Cont Plus (10M), and 120 for Speed Cont.
  • *The maximum number of shots for Multi-Target AF is the estimated total number of shots that can be recorded. The number of shots that can be recorded at one time is 5. When the number of remaining shots is 9999 or more, “9999” is displayed on the picture display.
  • *The number of remaining shots displayed on the picture display may differ from the actual number of shots, depending on the subject.
  • *Movie recording time and the maximum number of still pictures may vary depending on the capacity of the recording destination (internal memory or SD memory card), shooting conditions, and the type and manufacturer of the SD memory card.
  • *A high speed memory card is recommended when shooting for long periods.

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